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Pavel Tsatsouline - Kettlebell Simple & Sinister 2e

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Kettlebell Simple & Sinister
Revised & Updated
Pavel Tsatsouline
Kettlebell Simple & Sinister
Revised & Updated Edition
Pavel Tsatsouline
© MMXIX, MMXIII Power by Pavel, Inc. All rights reserved.
ISBN 978-0-9898924-3-8
Published by StrongFirst, Inc.
9190 Double Diamond Parkway
Reno, NV 89521, USA
www.StrongFirst.com
Editor: Laree Draper • www.ontargetpublications.net
Photography: Ralph DeHaan Photography • www.ralphdehaan.com
and Teal Tree Studios, Inc. • www.tealtreestudios.com
Design: Rachel Darvas • rachel.darvas.sfg@gmail.com
Simple & Sinister™ is a trademark by Power by Pavel, Inc.
StrongFirst® and the shield are registered trademarks by StrongFirst, Inc.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written
permission by the copyright holder, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles
and reviews.
DISCLAIMER
The author and publisher of this book are not responsible in any manner whatsoever for any injury
that may occur through following the instructions contained in this material. The activities may be too
strenuous or dangerous for some people. The readers should always consult a physician before engaging
in them.
PART I: KETTLEBELL
THE RUSSIAN KETTLEBELL AN EXTREME HANDHELD GYM
If a kettlebell were a person, it would be the type of a guy you would want [on your side] in an alley
fight.
—Glenn Buechlein, powerlifter
The kettlebell is an ancient Russian weapon against weakness.
A kettlebell at the Vaziani Air Base Gym in the former Soviet republic of Georgia
Called girya in Russian, this cannonball with a handle has been making better men and women for
over 300 years. In imperial Russia, “kettlebell” was synonymous with “strength.” A strongman or
weightlifter was called a girevik…a “kettlebell man.” Strong ladies were girevichkas, “kettlebell
women.”
“Not a single sport develops our muscular strength and bodies as well as kettlebell athletics,”
reported Russian magazine Hercules in 1913.
Kettlebells are compact, inexpensive, virtually indestructible, and can be used anywhere. The
unique nature of kettlebell lifts provides a powerful training effect with a relatively light weight, and
you can replace an entire gym with a couple of kettlebells. Dan John famously quipped, “With this
kettlebell in my bedroom, I can prepare myself for the Nationals.”
Since I introduced the Russian kettlebell to the West in 1998, it has become a mainstay in the
training of champions in sports ranging from powerlifting to MMA to triathlon. Elite special operations
units have made the kettlebell an integral part of their training. They have discovered that kettlebells
deliver extreme all-round fitness—and no single other tool does it better.
Experience and science agree that kettlebell training develops a wide range of attributes: strength
and power, various types of endurance, muscle hypertrophy, fat loss, health, and more. The kettlebell
swing is known to improve the deadlift of elite powerlifters—and the running times of high-level long
distance runners. This is what gireviks call “the What the Hell Effect.” The kettlebell defies the laws of
specificity.
Russian kettlebell power to you!
SIMPLE & SINISTER
Competitive “sophistication” (rather, complication masked as sophistication) is harmful, as
compared to the practitioner’s craving for optimal simplicity.
—Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Antifragile
This program is as simple and sinister as the kettlebell itself.
I owe its name to a U.S. counterterrorist operator who used it to describe my system.
Since he has now retired from government service, I can finally name this warrior and gentleman—
Carl Agnelli—and thank him in public.
I have been refining it ever since, making it even simpler while keeping it sinister.
In the XIV century, William of Occam, of Occam’s Razor fame, gave the best training advice: “It is
vain to do with more what can be done with less.” The Simple & Sinister program (S&S) has been
ruthlessly pruned down to only two exercises, known to deliver the widest range of benefits while being
simple to learn and safe when properly executed. The programming is foolproof.
Simple & Sinister is what Russians call a “general preparation program.”
✓
S&S will prepare you physically for almost anything life could throw at you, from carrying a
piano upstairs to holding your own in a street fight.
✓ S&S will forge a fighter’s physique, because the form must follow the function.
✓ S&S will give you the strength, the stamina, and the suppleness to recreationally play any sport
—and play it well.
✓
If you are a serious athlete, S&S will serve as a perfect foundation for your sport-specific
training.
✓ If you are a serious lifter, S&S will build your strength, rather than interfere with it.
Simple & Sinister will achieve all of the above while leaving plenty of time and energy to do your
duty, your job, practice your sport, and have a life.
Simple & sinister
What S&S is Not
This is not a program to maximize any single attribute or performance in a particular event. If your
goal is to press the heaviest kettlebell possible, to do 1,000 swings nonstop, to deadlift a record weight,
or to win a championship race, S&S is not what you are looking for. That is what specialist programs
are for—and they should always come after a foundation of general physical preparation has been laid.
Otherwise, you will only see short-term gains, fail to reach your potential, and might get hurt.
Most people, with the exception of competitive athletes at or above the high intermediate level, do
not need specialized training of that sort and will get the most benefits with the least investment of time
and energy from a powerful generalist program like S&S.
Here is the S&S plan in a nutshell.
There are only two moving parts, the swing and the get-up. No other exercises offer as many allaround benefits in such a tight package. “To build a superman, slow movements and quick lifts are
required,” taught Bob Hoffman of York Barbell. The get-up is the ultimate slow lift; the swing is the
ultimate quick lift. The yin and the yang, both bases covered.
Mark Reifkind, Master SFG[1] instructor, calls the swing the most beneficial exercise anyone can do.
Among its many benefits are superior conditioning, rapid fat loss, explosive hip power, killer grip,
various back health benefits, and it is easy on the knees. Rif adds that the swing is “scalable to a 70year-old grandmother and to a 20-year-old super athlete.”
Arctic swings by Master SFG Tommy Blom from Sweden
The get-up is an old-time strongman stunt that is the king of “functional training.” While everyone
pays functional training lip service, the get-up delivers. When done with sufficient weight, it teaches the
body many movement lessons that cannot be learned through sissy exercises using balls, bands, and
Ken and Barbie dumbbells. Once you have conquered the get-up, you will be the master of your body,
not its guest.
The get-up does magic for one’s shoulders, making them remarkably resilient against Brazilian jiujitsu shoulder locks and heavy bench presses. The get-up is also one of the best ab exercises. Together
with the swing, the get-up develops impressive, although not exaggerated, back and shoulders.
You will be training five or six times a week on a flexible schedule. Your workout is 100 swings and
10 get-ups, a very modest volume. Ivan Ivanov, formerly a coach for the Bulgarian National Gymnastics
Team, notes: “A workout should give you more than it takes out of you.”
The human get-up—do not try it at home.
You will be doing swings in sets of 10 and get-up in sets of one to assure high power output in
swings and perfect technique in both. You will not be rushing between sets because the program is
biased toward power, strength, and quality.
S&S will leave you gas in the tank for an emergency. A friend once wrote to me from down range:
“Going hunting later today before dinner. A quick observation: The smart and most badass tactical
athletes I see on a daily basis work hard, but always leave some energy in the tank. They owe their lives
and their brothers’ to the ability to go hard every day and not be too sore from a workout.”
Occasionally, you will test your spirit and push the pedal to the metal in some manner.
YOUR KETTLEBELL KIT
You can pry my kettlebell out of my dead, cold hand.
—Anonymous
To paraphrase an ad for a Swiss watch, “You never really own a kettlebell. You merely look after it
for the next generation.” If you get quality bells and take care of them, they will outlive you. You might
as well get good ones.
Russian kettlebells are traditionally measured in poods. One pood, an old Russian unit, equals 16
kilograms, approximately 35 pounds. For the S&S program, you need the following bell sizes.
The Kettlebells You Need
Average strength lady
Strong lady
Average strength gentleman
Strong gentleman
Right now
18, 26, 35 lbs
26, 35, 44 lbs
35, 53 lbs
53, 70 lbs
Soon
44 lbs
53 lbs
70 lbs
88 lbs
If you are wondering what “strong” is, you are probably not there yet.
Ladies, you need more bells because you have a different upper-to-lower-body strength ratio than
gents. You will see a discrepancy between the genders in the swing and get-up goals for the same
reason. Although it seems like you are getting the fuzzy end of a lollypop by having to buy more
hardware, once you learn that kettlebells are priced per pound, you will realize you are getting a better
deal.
Gireviks do not talk pounds, even in the US and the UK, so start memorizing your kettlebell weights
in kilos. Here is the same chart in kilos.
Average strength lady
Strong lady
Average strength gentleman
Strong gentleman
Right now
8, 12, 16kg
12, 16, 20kg
16, 24kg
24, 32kg
Soon
20kg
24kg
32kg
40kg
Girevichkas: Lady Kettlebellers in Imperial Russia
In 1902, Linda “the Baltic Champion” Belling impressed the St. Petersburg Athletic Society by
one-arm curling 32kg.
Well past her prime, Agafiya Zavidnaya easily pressed a pair of 32s hanging on her pinkies. Anna
Geld, the wife of famous Russian clown Anatoly Durov, lifted heavy kettlebells and barbells on stage
in the 1920s. To prove her strength was for real, Anna once challenged a male wrestler. She lost, but
only after 20 minutes of ruthless fighting.
In 1913, circus performer Maria Lurs from Estonia juggled 32kg kettlebells and could one-arm
snatch a three-pood—48kg! Ivan Lebedev wrote about her, “Every stunt of hers is full of strength, yet
Maria Lurs’ figure is not at all rough, but amazes with its soft and supple lines…city ladies should see
this Eve’s daughter, rightfully proud of her strength and the harmony of her shape.”
But do not get the idea the Russian city ladies were wimps. St. Petersburg Gazette reported in
1897:
The strongest of the lady athletes in our capital is Ms. M.S.P….In spite of her young age and
her three-pood bodyweight, she one-arm presses two poods and 10 pounds…The second strongest
has to be Mrs. E.G…It is interesting that this athlete is married and her husband is much weaker
than her.
Take note, ladies. It can be done, especially in this age of feminized men. Pick up that kettlebell
and you should have no trouble becoming a better man than most men.
A XXI century girevichka. Firefighter and SFG Team Leader Asha Wagner can do a strict pullup—dead hang, no kipping, neck
to the bar—with a 70-pound kettlebell.
Your goal, eventually, is to dominate 35-pound get-ups and 53-pound one-arm swings if you are a
lady or a 70-pounder for both lifts if you are a gentleman. Experience shows these numbers to be very
achievable and reaching them makes a dramatic difference in all-around fitness and body composition.
Simple Goals
100 one-arm swings (sum of arms) in sets of 10
in five minutes
Five get-ups per arm (in sets of one) in 10 minutes,
after the swings and one minute of rest
Women
Men
24kg
32kg
16kg
32kg
“I feel stronger and more energetic than ever,” reported Caleb McCain on the StrongFirst.com
forum after achieving Simple. “I feel like running 20 miles and then getting in a fight.”
Should you decide to go beyond that, behold the Sinister challenge:
Sinister Challenge
100 one-arm swings (sum of arms) in sets of 10
in five minutes
Five get-ups per arm (in sets of one) in 10 minutes,
after the swings and one minute of rest
Women
Men
32kg
48kg
24kg
48kg
Mira “Sinister” Kwon Gracia, SFG Team Leader and Olympic Weightlifting Masters National Champion
There are no breaks for bodyweight or age. This is not an athletic competition, so there is no need
for fairness. If you have to pull an unconscious person from a wrecked car or get in a street fight, you
will not have the luxury of stepping on a scale or showing your driver’s license.
Noah “Sinister” Maxwell, SFG Team Leader
ALWAYS LOADED
Once a year, even an unloaded gun shoots.
—Russian range masters’ observation
Kettlebells do not hurt people. People do.
A kettlebell will get your respect—the easy way or the hard way.
Here is the easy way.
1.
Get a medical clearance.
Get clearance, especially from an orthopedist and a cardiologist. The latter is no joking matter,
since kettlebell training can be extremely intense.
2.
Always be aware of your surroundings.
Find a training area with a non-slippery surface on which you are not afraid to drop a kettlebell.
The area must be clear of objects you might trip over—including other kettlebells—or that you
might hit with a kettlebell. There should be no people or animals in a radius where you could injure
them.
Note the direction of the sun if you are practicing the get-up outdoors. Beware of getting dizzy
from looking toward the sky.
3.
Train barefoot or wear shoes with a flat, thin sole and room for the toes to spread.
Training barefoot is superior for health and performance reasons. If you must wear shoes, wear
Converse Chuck Taylors, Vibram Five Fingers, or similar shoes that have thin solesand do not
pinch the toes together. You have sensory receptors on the bottoms of your feet that make you
stronger and improve balance and coordination. Wearing traditional shoes diminishes the ability of
these receptors to work properly and therefore impedes performance and can increase the risk of
injury. Go native.
4.
Never contest for space with a kettlebell.
Do not try to save a rep that has gone wrong. Guide the kettlebell to fall harmlessly and move
out of the way if necessary. And remember, quick feet are happy feet.
5.
Practice safety measures at all times.
Respect every kettlebell, even the lightest one. Always use perfect form picking up and setting
down a kettlebell. The set is not over until the bell is safely parked.
6.
Keep moving once your heart rate is high.
After a hard set, walk around to help your heart pump the blood. Stop only when your heart
rate is halfway down to normal. Consider getting a heart rate monitor.
7.
Do not put your spine into flexion during or after training.
Forward-bending stretches and slouching after training, harmless as these seem, could injure
your back.
Unless counter-indicated, back-bending stretches are recommended following training.
8.
Focus on quality, not quantity.
Gray Cook, physical therapist extraordinaire, points out that motor control goes south with
fatigue and “the body will always sacrifice quality for quantity.” When you are no longer able to
continue with perfect technique, the gig is up.
Instruction cannot cover all contingencies and there is no substitute for good judgment. Be a
responsible adult, not a victim.
Treat your kettlebell as if it is always loaded.
DON’T “WORK OUT”-PRACTICE
I never went to the gym to work out. I went to learn. I ended up sweaty and tired, so you might say a
workout happened, but it was in the process of learning.
—Dr. Ed Thomas
At StrongFirst, we view strength, endurance, power, and other athletic qualities as skills.
Accordingly, we approach our training as a “practice,” not a “workout.” It will pay to acquire this
mindset from the start.
I am about to teach you the progressions toward the classic technique in the swing and the get-up.
Practice these skills almost daily, sandwiched between the joint mobility exercises and the stretches you
will learn shortly.
Do not worry about getting a pump, a burn, or a sweat. Set aside 20 to 30 minutes and practice—as
you would rehearse playing a musical instrument, fully absorbed in the task and committed to getting
better rather than doing time and marking off a certain number of reps.
Dedicate 10 to 15 minutes to swings and as many to get-ups. There are no weight or rep goals to hit,
only technical perfection. Evaluate your performance as one would in gymnastics, figure skating, or
platform diving—on skill and style alone.
Listen to Anna “Sinister” Cannington, StrongFirst Elite:
Patiently practice the exercises in S&S every day, by the book, being extremely dedicated to
technique, learning all the nuances, and being committed to doing each part of it better each and
every day... almost forgetting about the weight until you notice that it’s pretty easy and maybe you
should grab a heavier kettlebell…
Sinister Anna, victorious
Just do not go to the other extreme of assuming that the weight does not matter. Sissies do not
impress Sinister Anna: “They start super light with wimpy swings and then take forever to get stronger.”
Start light, but rapidly progress to the kettlebells you would describe as “medium.” Weights that are
too light do not offer enough feedback for quality learning.
Swings
Getups
Average strength
lady
12kg
8kg
Suggested Starting Weights
Strong
Average strength
lady
gentleman
16kg
16kg
12kg
Strong
gentleman
24kg
16kg
24kg
Practice your swings in sets of five to 10 reps—and do not hesitate to park the bell sooner if you
think your form is about to go.
Anna insists:
Make the swings EXPLOSIVE. They should be hard to do. Maybe even test your explosiveness
by going outside and throwing the bell, letting it go as it comes toward the top of the swing. If it
doesn’t fly six feet or more, you’re not swinging explosively. Really work on that. Lazy, easy
pendulum swings aren’t good for progress, and they are all too common.
In the beginning, do only two-arm swings. Once you feel competent, mix in one-arm and hand-tohand versions.
Get-ups are limited to singles. This is first for safety, as something is bound to give if you keep a
pseudoisometric exercise like the get-up going too long. Second, we do this to prioritize strength
development. A single get-up rep on one side lasts about 30 seconds. If you were doing bench presses,
you would be able to do about eight clean, paused reps in that time. Sets of eight build strength. Sets of
16 or 24 reps just pump you up.
If your get-ups start to get shaky, do partial reps—stop at the stage of the lift where you still feel
safe and in control.
Do not rush. “Explore the movements,” teaches Dan John, former Master SFG instructor.
Anna Cannington instructs:
Make the get-ups 30–35 seconds each. I believe this is a key to success that many people miss!
They rush the get-up and therefore get a lot less time under tension and less quality movement.
Walk around between your sets and shake off tension. Actively rest until your breathing is almost
back down to normal. This applies to all drills, including your warm-ups.
Swings and get-ups are demanding on the grip, so use chalk. Do yourself a favor and help your grip
recover by periodically working the opposite muscles between sets. Buy a bundle of broccoli and take
off the rubber band holding it together. Throw away the broccoli, then put the band around the fingers
and thumb of one hand. Open the fingers against the resistance. No need to push this exercise hard; it is
a form of recovery. Do not bother counting reps.
To spare the environment from decomposing broccoli, you may want to buy a set of rubber bands
specially made by IronMind.com for finger extensor training.
(To stay on the disgusting vegetable topic, I enjoyed a cartoon with this caption: “I work out so I
don’t have to eat kale.”)
Extend the above mindful practice mentality to your warms-ups—especially squats—and stretches
as well.
You are to do nothing else during this practice—only lift the kettlebell and move for active recovery.
There is no chatting, looking at members of the opposite sex, watching TV, fooling around with your
phone (absolutely no phone), taking a drink of water, or going to the bathroom: just training. Your
session is barely half an hour long; stay focused.
Once you feel competent in both drills, you are ready for the standard S&S regimen outlined in Part
II. As you will discover, it is not that different from the above.
TAKE THE BRAKES OFF YOUR STRENGTH
Flexibility gives me my strength. Flexibility is my weapon.
—Ichiro Suzuki, New York Yankees
Strength that fails to reach is impotent.
Consider a Thai kickboxer throwing a vicious forward knee. The rear hip extends and the glute fully
contracts and throws the whole body of the fighter into the strike—while adding a couple of inches of
reach.
Now reflect on what happens when a character with tight hips tries to knee his opponent.
Cornell Ward and Gaius Ebratt, champion fighters coached by Steve Milles, SFG Team Leader
At StrongFirst, we do not stretch just for the heck of it. We stretch to remove the brakes that prevent
us from fully expressing our strength.
The three drills in this section have been cherry-picked to do just that.
The first exercise—the prying goblet squat—unlocks the pelvis and hips. The freedom of movement
it will give you is mind-boggling.
The second exercise—the StrongFirst hip bridge—will stretch the hip flexors, the muscles on the
top of the thighs that act like brakes for the glutes. It will release deadly strikes, fast sprints, and
powerful jumps.
The third exercise—the halo—will stretch the upper back and shoulders to free your arms.
Start each S&S practice with three circuits of five reps of each exercise.
Prying Goblet Squat
I do not come from a culture where people are comfortable enough with the squat to make it the
preferred resting position. But Russians do get enough squatting practice to maintain this fundamental
movement pattern. Simple and sinister toilets (a hole in the floor) on the farms, in the military, at train
stations, and many other places take care of that.
Americans and other Westerners need help. Enter the brilliantly simple goblet squat solution by Dan
John. It is an exceptional stretch, especially the prying version.
Do the drill barefoot. Pick up a light kettlebell by the horns and assume a shoulder-width stance
with your feet slightly turned out.
Stand ramrod straight. In addition to mobilizing and strengthening your lower body, the goblet squat
is an opportunity to improve your posture. A little attention to opening yourself up will go a long way
toward squeezing more speed, power, strength, precision, and endurance out of your muscles—with no
added effort.
Start the squat descent by pushing the knees apart.
Do not drop straight down; sit back slightly to five o’clock, as if aiming to sit on a curb.
Do not allow your heels to come up. Go as deep as you can without pain or losing your spinal
alignment.
Wedge your elbows inside your knees—exactly against the inner quads.
Push your knees apart with your elbows without letting your big toes and the balls of the feet come
off the ground.
Stay on the bottom of the squat. Relax without letting the spine round. Keep your chest up and stay
tall without tilting your head back. Do not shrug your shoulders—just the opposite. Breathe in a relaxed
manner.
Start “prying” your hips loose. I use this verb literally. Imagine pulling a massive wooden post out
of the ground. Pulling straight up will do very little, unless your name is King Kong or Eddie Coan. You
will have to pry the post back and forth and side to side.
You are going to do this prying with your hips. There are two goals. One is to separate your pelvis
into two halves, to “widen” it. Mobilizing your pelvis may spare you from many orthopedic problems
down the road. Two, the idea is to pull the hip joints out of their sockets. Do not panic—it is just a
visualization. Unless you are hypermobile, it would take wrestling legend Alexander Karelin’s best
efforts to dislocate your hips.
With this in mind, move your pelvis in different directions.
Make space.
Pull your hip joints out of their sockets.
Make your pelvis wider.
This is a good time to shuffle around and adjust your stance; remember where that stance is next
time you squat.
Your pelvis will keep sinking. Go as deep as you can without flexing your spine or experiencing
pain. Do not allow the elbows to drop.
Do a few curls without moving the elbows—seriously. It is a form of prying: The moving kettlebell
shifts the center of gravity back and forth. Jack Reape, an American record holder in the bench press,
was caught doing this at a gym. Admiring Jack’s pipes, the kid asked if this was his favorite biceps
exercise. Deadpan, Jack replied, “Favorite and only.”
Stand up with a grunt. Make sure your tail does not rise faster than your head. Lock your knees and
contract the glutes at the top.
If you are too weak to stand up with good form, set the bell down and sit back on the floor.
Stand tall on the top of each rep.
Do five reps, resting between them if necessary.
StrongFirst Hip Bridge
This drill aims to teach you to activate your glutes and fully extend your hips—without
hyperextending your back.
Lie on your back with your feet flat and knees bent about 90 degrees, as if you are about to do
crunches.
Squeeze a pair of cushy shoes—the kind I do not recommend for lifting—between your knees. This
will force you to brace your abs and to extend your hips instead of overarching your lower back.
Grip the ground with your toes, dig your heels in, and lift the pelvis as high as possible. Pause for
three seconds, constantly trying to lift higher and higher, then come down and relax. Rest briefly, and
repeat. Do five reps in this manner.
I must stress this point: This is not a muscular endurance exercise. Your job is not to see how long
you can hold the bridge, but to get the maximal glute contraction and the greatest range of motion.
Drive your pelvis through, as the Thai kickboxer in the earlier picture—not fast, but strong. The goal is
for the pelvis to rise high enough for the thighs to form a straight line with the torso.
If you are a martial artist, humor me and throw a couple of front knees or kicks against a target right
after these. You will see a big difference in reach and power.
Halo
This drill by Steve Maxwell is very simple, yet it covers many bases of upper-body mobility.
Hold a light kettlebell upside down by its horns or grab a light barbell plate. Lock your knees. Tense
the glutes to protect your back and brace your abs, as if you are about to get punched in the stomach.
Master SFG instructor Pavel Macek treats the halo as a “standing plank.”
Keeping your shoulders down as much as possible, slowly circle the bell or plate around your head
progressively tighter and lower.
Five circles in both directions are about right.
Do the Circuits
Perform the above three drills in the specified order for three circuits before your kettlebell training.
The above regimen is meant to bring a moderately tight but healthy person up to speed. You might have
some issues that need to be resolved with the help of a medical professional and later an SFG certified
kettlebell instructor.[2]
If you have a medical condition, follow the warm-up advice of your medical professional. If you do
not have a condition, do not be a sissy…and keep it short.
Right after the S&S sessions or later—preferably shortly before bedtime—do the following relaxed
stretches for the hip area so heavily involved in both swings and get-ups. Do one to three sets of each in
a circuit.
90/90 Stretch
Explains Dr. Michael Hartle, Master SFG:
This modified hurdler stretch is great for the hips and lower back. It stretches the gluteus
muscles and the various hip rotators. Sit on the floor on your left hip. Place your left leg, bent at a
right angle, in front of you, and your right leg, bent at a right angle, to the side. The starting
position will have right angles at both the right and left hip, knee and ankle, with the left foot
parallel to the right calf and the left calf parallel to the right thigh.
Place your right hand on your left ankle and your left hand, with the left arm rotated out, on
the ground outside your left hip. Making a “proud chest” and hinging at the hips only (no
rounding the spine!), lean forward and press your buttocks away, keeping the sternum over the
knee. Hold the stretch…making sure to relax and breathe deeply. Keep the neck and head in line
with the torso. Repeat on the opposite side.
Diagonally turning your upper body towards the front foot and repeating the directions above
will provide an additional stretch for this area. When performed properly, this stretch will be felt in
the outside of the front hip.
QL Straddle
This stretch is for the sides of the back. Sit in a straddle position.
You are about to stretch your right side by reaching toward the left. Stretch your right arm overhead
and get “tall.”
Reach forward—perpendicular to your left leg—with your left arm. Anchor your fingertips on the
ground.
Lean to the left, reaching over your head with the right arm.
Breathe and relax. Gradually reach farther and farther, hopefully far enough to grab your toes. If you
are tight, holding on to a bungee cord attached to a stationary object will help.
Nothing will happen in a single minute. The longer you stay in these two stretches and breathe
through the tight spots, the better.
THE DEADLIFT-THE MOST FUNDAMENTAL STRENGTH
SKILL
The hip hinge is the most powerful movement a human can do.
It’s the apex movement of an apex hunter!
—Dan John
Picking up a weight from the ground is the most fundamental strength skill there is for 20-year-old
Army Ranger Joe, Grandma Betty, and everyone in between.
It used to be called the “dead weight lift.” Today we know it as the “deadlift.”
When done with a barbell, it is a proud competitive lift and a formidable strength exercise. With a
kettlebell, the deadlift is a teacher of strong and healthy movement, with its lessons carrying far beyond
picking up a bag of groceries.
There is a widespread myth that the deadlift is just “a squat with the weight in your hands.” This is
perpetuated by the well-meaning but wrong advice to “lift with your legs, not your back.” The correct
guidance is to “lift with your hips.”
A deadlift is not a squat.
A deadlift is a hip hinge, in the same category as the clean and the snatch, whether with a kettlebell
or a barbell.
Here is the difference: In a squat, the knees and the hips flex to a similar degree on the way down. In
a hinge, the hips do most of the flexing.
In both hinges and squats, the spine stays neutral.
Hip Hinge
You are about to learn to hinge through the hips.
Stand with your feet slightly wider than your shoulders—wide enough to safely swing a large
kettlebell between the knees. Turn your feet slightly outward, less than 45 degrees. Elevate your toes
and the balls of the feet on 2x4s, 25-pound barbell plates, thick books, or other flat objects of equal
height. This tactic will prevent you from cheating because it stops the knees from slipping forward.
Open your chest and place the outside edges of your hands into the creases at the top of your thighs.
Shift your weight to your heels and chop your hands hard into your hip “hinges” to push the pelvis
back. Feel the muscles in the hip creases contracting as you hinge.
Push your tail back as far as you can—back, not down.
Your knees and ankles will naturally flex somewhat, but not to the point of losing a stretch in the
hamstrings. Focus on folding at the hips.
In all of the deadlift and swing evolutions, you must track the toes with the knees. In other words,
push the knees slightly out to prevent them from collapsing in.
Hinge as far as you can without rounding your back.
Look at the horizon for the duration of the drill. Keep your head up without jamming your neck.
Stand up by contracting your glutes—“crush a walnut.”
Practice the hip hinge until it becomes crisp and automatic. Then remove the crutches of the 2x4s,
but pretend they are still there, forcing the shins to stay near vertical. The knees may move slightly—but
no farther than the mid-foot. It is the only way to maintain a powerful bow-like stretch of the
hamstrings.
Short-Stop Drill
Prof. Stuart McGill’s short-stop drill will teach you other essential elements of professional deadlift
technique.
Assume the hip-hinge stance and hinge through your hips. Strongly grab your thigh muscles above
the kneecaps. Lock your elbows, then shift your weight slightly toward your heels.
McGill, the world’s leading spine biomechanist, comments:
Enjoy carrying the weight of your upper body down the arms and onto the thighs. Focus on the
curves in your torso—are they the same as when you were standing? If they are, you have good
form. If they are not, adjust them back to the natural curves.
Prof. McGill with the author
Now “anti-shrug” your shoulders with your lats. This is extremely important. At StrongFirst we call
the lats the “super muscles.” Engaged properly, they help protect the spine and shoulders and increase
strength in lower- and upper-body exercises.
Push down hard with your armpits while pushing the chest out. You are in a very powerful posture
and it should feel like it.
You know how to stand up: Contract your glutes and drive your pelvis forward.
Deadlift
Straddle a kettlebell between your heels. Parking it farther behind you will activate your lats even
more and will teach you valuable skills for the swing.
Take a breath and force your shoulders down away from your ears—the anti-shrug.
Sit back, loading your heels, but not letting the toes come off the ground.
Reach for the kettlebell with “long arms” without looking at it. Do not lose the lat contraction and
the anti-shrug; do not allow your upper back and chest to collapse.
When you have reached the bell make sure—
✓ the lower back is flat or slightly arched (if you cannot help rounding, elevate the kettlebell on a
box or a few books and work on your flexibility.);
✓ the chest is open, the head is up and the eyes are on the horizon;
✓ the shoulders are pressed down, away from the head—anti-shrug;
✓ the weight is slightly toward the heels;
✓
the shins are nearly vertical; the knees may not be farther forward than the mid-foot (you may
bring back the 2x4s if you are having trouble.);
✓ the pelvis is higher than the knees, but lower than the shoulders;
✓ the arms are straight;
✓ the knees are tracking the toes.
If you brought your feet closer together, the bottom position would look exactly like the bottom
of a natural athlete’s standing broad jump, power-coiled in every lower-body muscle.
Hook the kettlebell handle with your fingers, but do not grip it tightly. Take the slack out of your
armpits. You are ready.
Stand up ramrod straight—snappy, although not quite explosive.
Your pelvis must never rise faster than your shoulders. Marty Gallagher teaches: “Everything must
arrive at once.” You want everything to travel as one piece—as in a jump.
At the lockout, your body must form a straight line. The knees are locked; the back and neck are
neutral. Do not lean back. Imagine standing with your back flush against a wall.
Tense every muscle below your neck—plank. Grip the ground with your toes. Pull up the kneecaps.
Cramp the glutes. Brace the abs, as if you are about to be punched. Keep the lats locked and loaded.
You are a board.
At the same time, keep your traps relaxed and your face impassive.
Pause for an instant, and then start the descent by hinging back. Maintain perfect form and do not be
concerned with the speed of the movement.
Without looking at the kettlebell, touch it to the ground between your heels. The kettlebell will want
to land in front of you. Do not let it. Guide it back with your lats—“swim” it back.
Although traditionally deadlifts are done with a pause on the platform between reps—remember the
original name of the “dead weight lift”—for our purposes, touch-and-go deads are optimal. As soon as
you touch the deck, immediately stand up.
Inhale through your nose on the way down. Forcefully, but not completely, exhale through your
teeth on the way up.
Practice in sets of five to 10 reps, always ending with the kettlebell between your heels.
Do not use a mirror, but I strongly encourage you to film yourself for review.
THE SWING - A FAT-BURNING ATHLETE-BUILDER
The goal is maximal hip drive, speed, and aggression.
—Andy Bolton, the world’s strongest deadlifter, on kettlebell swings
The swing is a Russian army knife of exercises. What else do you call an exercise that can increase
both a professional powerlifter’s strength and an elite marathoner’s endurance?
“The Swing is The Thing,” states Rif. “It’s the best exercise for almost everyone—beginners to elite
athletes, youngsters to elders. I just can’t find another exercise that is as easy on the body and makes
one work as hard as the hard style kettlebell swing. It strengthens the body and at the same time, it heals
it.”
Hike Pass
The top of the swing is a plank. The bottom is what Dan John calls the “silverback” stance.
Assume the bottom position of the deadlift—without the kettlebell. Press your straight arms against
your body—the upper arms against the ribs and the forearms against the upper inner thighs…high up.
The more snugly your arms are pressed against your legs and torso, the more powerful the swings will
be. You will be literally launching the bell with your body, as opposed to waiting for the power to be
transmitted through the shoulders.
Now stretch your fingertips and sternum as far apart as you can. Reach back with the former, and
forward with the latter. Remember this stretched and loaded sensation and note where your hands and
thus the kettlebell would be. This is where you will actively guide the bell toward from now on.
Stand a foot or so behind the kettlebell. Hip hinge and hook the bell with your fingers. Tilt the bell
toward you so it forms an extension of your arms. Keep your arms straight and relaxed and engage the
lats to “connect” the arms to the body. Look toward the horizon.
Without changing position, “hike pass” the kettlebell back between your legs, aiming to place the
upper arms against the ribs and the forearms against the upper inner thighs—the “silverback.” Aim
high, above your knees.
Do not do any swings yet; just practice hiking the bell and parking it. Let the bell passively
pendulum forward to rest in the place where it started.
It is worth repeating: Your arms are actively throwing the bell back and letting it pendulum on the
way forward.
Practice in sets of five to 10 reps. Hike the bell aggressively, feeling the hamstrings load like a bow
every time. Note how your weight shifts back and forth on your feet, but never allow the heels to
unload.
Two-Arm Swing
When you have the hike pass down, start swinging. Hike and pendulum the bell for a few reps and
then, once you find a rhythm, explosively straighten after finishing a hike pass.
Look at the horizon for the duration of the drill. Keep your head up without jamming your neck.
As before, do not think about the bell on the way up. Drive with your hips and let it freely
pendulum. On the upswing, the arms and shoulders only transfer the hips’ power, but do not lift the
kettlebell. The arms must be straight and loose to do the job—like ropes. If your technique is correct,
the kettlebell will form an extension of the arms.
Memorize this:
In the swing, the arms work on the negative, the hips on the positive.
If you are doing everything right, the bell will naturally go up to a level somewhere between your
stomach and shoulders. Do not try to swing it higher! Like a broad jump or a straight punch, the swing
is an exercise in projecting power forward.
On a related subject, do not lean back at the top of the swing. Let your glutes do the job; leave your
back out of it. It is also very important to brace your abs.
If your heels come up, release the kettlebell to protect your back! This applies to all swing
evolutions. Soon you will learn to play a tug-of-war with the kettlebell and subtly change the weight
distribution on your feet in response to the kettlebell’s shenanigans.
Incidentally, being able to reflexively react to such perturbations is an important component of back
pain prevention—and research shows that kettlebell swings improve this ability.
In addition, you will increase agility and athletic power. “Balance boosts power,” states Dr. Michael
Colgan, explaining that it takes more energy to move an unbalanced body.
After five to 10 reps, park the kettlebell in front of you as you practiced in the hike pass and
pendulum drills. Remember, until the kettlebell is safely parked, the set is not over!
Keep practicing the swings. You no longer need to pendulum the bell for reps before swinging it—
just one hike and go.
Be explosive. But do not confuse speed with panic.
Next, work on your breathing. Forcefully exhale through your teeth on the way up; sharply inhale
through your nose on the way down. In the future, you will learn how to take two sharp inhalations back
to back on the way down.
To help you find the breathing rhythm, loudly call out the number of each rep at the top of the
swing. Loud. Louder!
Later, once you have fully dialed in the breathing rhythm, switch to grunts or Tssa!!! sounds. Do not
try to be quiet; the swing is not that type of exercise. The swing is full of spirit, like a karate punch.
KIAI!!!
Along with your battle cry, cramp your glutes, brace your abs, and pull up your kneecaps.
Drive your hips through!
Here is a key subtlety to work on next: Once the kettlebell has reached the apex of its flight, let it
float for an instant. Then, once it has started falling, guide it back between your legs using the lats. Stay
upright and do not release the glutes until your forearms almost hit your stomach. At the very last
second, hinge your hips and get out of the way. Play chicken with the kettlebell.
I must make a point. A hard style swing demands maximally explosive individual reps—not
maximum cadence. Enjoy the float on the top; it is the only rest you are going to get.
One-Arm Swing
A passage in Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Antifragile caught my eye:
People who build their strength using these modern expensive gym machines can lift extremely
large weights, show great numbers and develop impressive-looking muscles, but fail to lift a stone;
they get completely hammered in a street fight by someone trained in more disorderly settings.
Their strength is extremely domain-specific and their domain doesn’t exist outside…
“Disorderly settings” are what you need when you are after all-terrain strength.
Enter the one-arm swing. The bell not only pulls you forward, but it is determined to twist you as
well. It is seriously “antifragile” when a man can show a 48kg who is the boss, or a woman a 32kg.
An asymmetrical load seriously challenges the stabilizers and increases the recruitment of many
muscles. When I swung a 32kg kettlebell two-handed in Prof. McGill’s lab, my glutes fired up to 80%
maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVC). When I did it one-handed, the recruitment was up to
100%. And the lat contraction jumped from 100% to 150%!
In case you are wondering how it is possible to contract a muscle 150%, the max is isometric. In
dynamic contractions, higher values are possible—“plyometrics” are a case in point.
The swing on the left generates more power. The one on the right recruits more muscle.
Last but not least, the one-arm swing is an exceptional grip-builder.
Why would you do two-arm swings at all if the one-arm version is so great? Because two-arm
swings generate more power, as proven on the force platform. With reduced stabilization demands, you
can really let it rip. Hence, do both types of swings.
Brett Jones, StrongFirst Director of Education, warns, “People usually progress very quickly past
this exercise to get to one-arm swings and snatches. It is a mistake.”
When you are very competent in the two-arm swing—and not a moment sooner—add the one-arm
swing to your practice.
One-Arm Swing Technique
Set the kettlebell on the floor with its handle parallel to your shoulders. With the working arm,
loosely grip the handle in the middle—hook it with your fingers. Take the slack out of your shoulder
using your lat.
Square your shoulders—more or less. The hard style one-arm swing is an anti-rotation exercise. In
other words, the weight is trying to twist you, while you insist on staying on a straight and narrow. That
said, it is impossible to avoid some rotation, especially with a heavy bell—which is why I wrote “more
or less.”
Now swing.
Hike pass the bell as usual, but do not aim for the center. In left-arm swings, the forearm should
make contact with the left inner thigh; in right-arm swings, with the right.
At the top of the rep, the kettlebell will surge forward, determined to twist your torso and to pull
your shoulder out of its socket. Do not let it. Square your shoulders. Pull the working shoulder back into
its socket—but do not shrug it up.
As for the free arm, let it naturally swing back on the way down. Do not overdo it to the point of
making your spine twist. Let it swing up on the upswing to end in the on-guard position.
Hand-to-Hand Swing (H2H)
A squad of Russian soldiers has been digging a ditch for hours. Finally a young trooper makes the
mistake of asking the squad leader when they would get to rest. “Rest when the dirt is in the air. The
farther you throw it, the more rest you get,” answers the sergeant.
This is also the secret to a great swing.
Maximally cramp the glutes and pop the hips to make the kettlebell weightless for an instant. Do not
rush—let the bell float while keeping the glutes tight. All of your swings should be done this way, but
the H2H version, which demands a hand switch on the fly, really drives home the point. Brett Jones
calls this “pop and float.”
The second lesson the H2H swing teaches is “taming the arc.” At the top of each rep, release the bell
and catch it with the other hand. It will not want to cooperate. When an object is accelerating in an orbit,
the centrifugal force pulls it away from the center. David took advantage of this force when he slayed
Goliath with his sling.
You need to bring the bell in closer—“tame the arc,” as Rob Lawrence put it. This is done by
shrugging the shoulder back, not up—like starting a lawn mower. Do not pull with the biceps.
Pluck the bell out of the air with your other hand and carry on. If you have failed to tame the arc and
the only way you can catch the bell is by reaching forward, abort. Let the bell fall and save your back to
swing another day.
The H2H swing is not a part of the S&S plan because it is less challenging to the grip than the onearm swing. It is just a drill to make two-arm and one-arm swings feel the same: Pop and float; tame the
arc.
Take Care of Your Hands
Arm-wrestling is a blue collar sport. Competitors would not be caught dead moisturizing,
exfoliating, and practicing other metrosexual nonsense. Marty, one of the best middleweights at our
club, counted on this when he dropped his psych bomb. As soon as he gripped up with another puller
but before the ref gave the Go! command, Marty opened his eyes wide and pronounced deadpan: “Your
skin is so smooth and silky!” The other guy burst out laughing just as the “Go!” rang out. Laughter
relaxes. Marty pinned his opponent in a flash.
That mind game would not have worked on a girevik. The manliest men of the kettlebell
begrudgingly take care of their skin because bleeding callusses do not build character, they just they
waste valuable training time. Here how to avoid them.
Get quality kettlebells with smooth handles.
Gradually build up your training volume.
Do not abuse chalk—a little is good; a lot may make the skin tear.
Do not overgrip the bell in swings. Hook the handle with your fingers and try not to pinch the
callusses at the bases of the fingers. As you get more skilled, you will find ways to rest the grip in
certain phases of the swing and regrip on the fly.
Moisturize your mitts before going to bed, hopefully with something manly like Cornhuskers
Lotion.
Do not let calluses get thick. At night, soak them in hot water and scrape them with pumice stone.
Do not scrape too thin though, just enough to get rid of the protruding parts that are likely to get
pinched. Then do that “moisturizing” thing.
If it feels like a callus or blister is about to go, stop to swing another day.
Step-by-Step Blister Care
by Kristann Heinz, MD, SFG
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
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When you first detect a blister, stop the activity. Do not break or pop the blister. The skin
covering the blister helps to protect it from infection.
Gently wash with soap or clean with Betadine if you are not near a sink. If the blister is
broken, wash the area. If the blister came from kettlebell training, it is important to clean the
blister of any paint or metal filings that may be embedded in the blister area.
Next, apply an antibiotic ointment such as Neosporin or Bacitracin to the area.
Protect the blister with a blister doughnut. You can buy moleskin at a drugstore. Cut out a
circle of the moleskin slightly larger than the blister area. Place the moleskin ring around the
blister.
Cover the blister area with gauze and secure it with hypoallergenic tape. This should
reduce the friction to the area. Change the blister dressing daily.
With proper care, a blister should heal in three to five days.
Monitor the healing. If you find the blister area is increasingly red, swollen, painful, or
you notice pus, the blister may be infected. Check to see if you have a fever. The blister
needs to be looked at by medical professional, who may prescribe antibiotics for a skin
infection or cellulitis.
If you have a torn callus, follow these care instructions for a broken blister.
Do not let me catch you wearing those sissy gym gloves! Thin cotton gardening gloves with the
fingers cut off are acceptable.
So are “sock sleeves,” as suggested by Tracy “The Swing Queen” Reifkind. You will need a pair of
medium thickness crew socks—new socks, since worn elastic will not hold the sleeves in place. Cut off
the tops of the socks, about two inches long—three if you have big hands. Center the sock sleeve on the
callus line and you are ready for swings. You may use sock sleeves all the time or just for an occasional
high-volume challenge. Do not wear them for get-ups.
Swing Standards
Task:
Swing, one arm
Condition:
Swing a kettlebell back between your legs and then in front up to the chest level.
Standard:
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4.
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6.
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11.
The back is neutral. The neck is slightly extended or neutral on the bottom of the swing.
The heels, toes, and the balls of the feet are planted, and the knees track the toes.
The working shoulder is packed.
The kettlebell handle passes above the knees during the backswing.
The working arm is straight at the bottom position.
There is no forward knee movement on the upswing.
The body forms a straight line at the top of the swing. The hips and knees fully extend;
the spine is neutral.
The kettlebell forms an extension of the forearm at the top of the swing; the arm is almost
straight.
Inhale on the way down; forcefully exhale on the way up.
The abs and glutes visibly contract at the top of the swing.
The kettlebell floats for a second at the top of the swing.
THE GET-UP – YOUR STRONGMAN MENTOR
The get-up is loaded yoga.
—Gray Cook
Legend has it that old-time strongmen taught apprentices the get-up and told them to come back
when able to do it with 100 pounds.
The skills and strength the apprentice would acquire over the many months of pursuing this noble
goal would be far superior to whatever a roomful of personal trainers could have produced during the
same time—and no words would have been wasted.
The kettlebell get-up in a 1959 textbook by Anatoly Kharlampiev on sambo, a Soviet system of close quarter combat and sport
wrestling
The aspiring strongman would be repeating his childhood development process in a way. Roll
over…prop up…kneel…victoriously stand up. Wobbly in the beginning, he would gain confidence with
every rep.
I was introduced to this exercise by Steve Maxwell. The get-up is at least 200 years old, and modern
specialists view it as an exceptionally functional exercise. Gray Cook, physical therapist to Navy
SEALs and NFL teams, said:
The Turkish get-up is the perfect example of training primitive movement patterns—from
rolling over, to kneeling, to standing and reaching. If I were limited to choosing only one exercise,
it would be the Turkish get-up.
Gray Cook coaching the get-up
When our strongman apprentice finally got to 70–100 pounds, his real learning would begin.
“Heavy weight is instructive,” states Cook. There is nothing like a big ball of iron overhead to teach you
about physics. You will instinctively know you had better place your foot or hand just so—or else.
The apprentice would also learn that, in Dan John’s words, “The body is one piece.”
Many athletes never learn that crucial lesson—and never have a shot at a title. The get-up will be
kind enough to explain it to you. Your abs will fire like crazy; peak activation in excess of 100% in all
main midsection muscles has been documented in a get-up with only 50 pounds. Work up to a heavy
weight in the get-up and your torso will be up to the standards of Ron Swanson’s Pyramid of Greatness:
“thick and unpenetratable.”
Your lats, the “super muscles,” will go live and learn how to play with the other kids. Your shoulder
stabilizers will get freakishly strong.
“Stabilizers are what give you the mechanical advantage to be stronger,” explains Gray Cook. “This
is how the get-up makes you stronger.”
Many a bench presser has scratched his head seeing his press climb after getting serious about the
get-up. Although the S&S program does not have a pressing exercise in the literal sense, expect your
pressing strength to go up. This is in part due to the hypertrophy of the muscles of the shoulder girdle.
Science and experience teach us that prolonged isometric contractions build muscle.
Let us drill your get-up in stages. Follow Karen Smith, Master SFG.
To Elbow
You are about to do a right-handed get-up. Lie on your back with your left arm on the ground,
pointing toward your feet at a 45-degree angle. Place your left leg parallel to the left arm.
Straighten your right arm and place a sneaker (a smelly one, preferably, to better motivate you not to
drop it) on top of your upright fist. This odd tactic will help you learn the movement without worrying
about the weight. Dealing with the shoe will teach you to guide the kettlebell in the right direction,
respecting the gravity and the forces generated by your muscles—to “steer your strength,” as Prof.
McGill has put it. The shoe falling off means you have either made a jerky transition—do not ever do it
again!—or have disrespected the law of gravity by letting the virtual kettlebell get too far away from its
base of support.
Bend your right knee and plant the right foot away from your left thigh, pointing the foot
approximately 45 degrees to the right. Do not place the heel too close to the glute.
Pushing off your right foot, pivot on the left elbow and prop yourself up on that elbow.
Throughout the evolutions, keep your right wrist rigid; do not extend it to cheat to make supporting
the shoe easier. Keep that elbow straight at all times.
This movement is not a crunch or a sit-up.
It is a roll of your “planked” body to the left until most of the weight—yours, plus the kettlebell’s
when the time comes—is supported by your left elbow and forearm.
To make it happen, look 45 degrees to the left, then push the ground hard with your right foot.
Direct your leg drive about 45 degrees to the left, as opposed to straight up. Several bodyparts need to
face in that same direction:
✓ the eyes—followed by the head;
✓ the right knee (point it in while keeping the foot flat on the ground);
✓ the solar plexus;
✓ the right fist—“Squeeze the kettlebell toward the midline,” teaches Jones;
✓ the left foot, as your hip rolls to the left.
To fighters, the above might remind them of the right cross mechanics.
Fabio Zonin, Master SFG, stresses that it is the eyes that are the first to move 45 degrees to the left,
followed by the head, and the body.
My stunt double, Pavel Macek, Master SFG
Pavel Macek, Master SFG, reminds that even though you are looking in the direction the kettlebell
is about to go, you still need to keep an eye on it out of the corner of your right eye.
“As you are driving with the planted foot, imagine you are trying to send your chest toward the
[opposite] side,” instructs former Senior SFG instructor Mark Toomey. “Lead with the chest, not with
the head. This will prevent neck flexion and strain and create space in the shoulder.”
Of course, all of the above will heavily load the left arm. If it is paid no attention, its shoulder will
painfully shrug as the rib cage collapses. Thus, you must drive your left elbow and forearm down hard
into the deck as they are being loaded. Push your chest out and your shoulders down away from the
ears.
Now that you are sitting strong, you may finally “open” your right knee—push it out as you would
when squatting.
These instructions sound confusing and complicated as you are reading them, but as you hit the
ground and start practicing, they will make more and more sense.
Remember to keep your whole body tight—“planked.” A stiff object is easier to move than a limp
noodle.
Practice in sets of five reps until you can do this in your sleep. Precisely control the movement on
the way up and down. Do not hold your breath in the get-up evolutions. This is a yin exercise.
This get-up stage will become a remarkable abdominal exercise once you load it with a heavy
kettlebell.
To Hand
Rotate your left hand approximately 90 degrees counterclockwise, and externally rotate the shoulder
in order to avoid jamming your wrist and to put the shoulder in a stronger position.
Some people may need to slide the hand back. You will have to experiment to find your structure’s
optimal hand placement. It helps to conduct a mental experiment: “If I had to support 100 pounds
overhead, where would I want my hand to be?”
Reload the palm while straightening the elbow, pushing your chest out and anti-shrugging the
shoulder down. Turn your elbow pit forward as much as possible, without turning the palm.
Push your right knee—which up until now has been pointing inward—out to direct the leg drive.
This makes space to sit up. Lengthen your spine to a “tall sit” position.
Turn your head a few times. Turning your head at this and other stages of the get-up helps assure the
neck is relaxed and the shoulders are down.
Slowly reverse the sequence, carefully tucking your elbow to the floor.
Remember, look at the kettlebell for the duration of this phase.
To Lunge
There are several ways to progress to the next position, the bottom of the lunge. In this drill, you are
going to use a “low sweep.”
Bend your left knee and tuck the heel in as if you are about to sit cross-legged. Push down hard with
your left palm and lift your pelvis to allow the left leg to be swept to the right until the knee is in a line
between the right heel and the left hand. You will end up in a windmill position with the right hip
hinged to the side, the spine rotated but not bent in any direction.
Simultaneously, straighten your body upright and square your hips. Tensing the right glute helps.
You are now in the bottom of the lunge position, with your left knee facing left. Square off your hips
so the left knee points forward; flex your left foot and place your toes and the ball of the foot on the
deck, ready to lunge.
At this point, fix your gaze forward toward the horizon and do not look up until you have reached
the same point on the way down. You will no longer be looking at the bell.
As with all stages, drill this until it becomes second nature before moving to the next step.
The Tactical Get-Up
Gun-carrying professionals need to be able to quickly assume a kneeling position without losing an
upright posture and with minimal use of the hands. For them, a roll-up is a better way than a low sweep
to reach the half-kneeling position.
Once you have positioned your feet as in the low sweep, push back with the left palm,
simultaneously tense both of your glutes and drive the hips forward as you would in a swing. Do not
lead with the shoulders.
Mark Toomey performing a tactical get-up with an AKM and an 80-pound vest
Practice the roll-up without a weight and without your arm raised. Eventually, you’ll progress to
roll-ups without using the planted hand at all.
While it does not challenge the shoulder in as many planes as the low sweep, the roll-up demands
greater upper back mobility to keep the raised arm vertical.
Stand Up
Do not plant your right foot too close to your butt; this would force your knee too far forward on the
ascent to the standing position. Experiment to find the sweet spot. Make sure to keep your heel down
for the sake of your knee.
Bring your right arm back so it is in line with your ear. Grunt, fire the right glute, and stand up.
Visualize squeezing your knees together when standing up. This will give you a lot more control.
Gun-carrying professionals, take a note of this technique for moving from a low shooting position.
You will need to experiment to find a comfortable lunge length and width.
Get Down
Next you will reverse the get-up from standing to lying.
Helpful pointers:
Step back with your left foot while keeping your weight on the right. Slide your left foot
straight back, as if on skis rather than tight-roping it behind the right.
Touch the deck softly with your left knee. Practice hitting the sweet spot.
Pivot your left knee so it is facing left—the same position it ended up in after the low sweep.
Place your left hand on the ground, in line with your left knee. Make sure not to plant the left
hand very far from your torso as this would make your left shoulder vulnerable and could
hyperextend your back. Focus not on reaching the ground with your hand, but on hinging the
hips sideways to the right.
Load your lat from the armpit when planting your left hand on the ground.
Watch out for flexing the right elbow on the way down. Visualize “pushing yourself away
from the kettlebell.”
Do not hit the ground hard—you could end up with a kettlebell stuck in your grill.
If you are too tired or venturing into a new weight territory, you may skip the get-down.
Lower the kettlebell to your chest with both hands, then swing it back between your legs, both
hands on the handle in a pistol grip, and park it in front of you as you do after swings. I insist
that you use both hands, even if you feel you do not need to.
If any position does not feel right, pause and tweak it.
To check your technique at every stage of the get-up ask yourself,
“Would I be willing or able to do this with a 100-pound kettlebell?”
“The get-up is a slow exercise and there is never an excuse to be out of position,” stresses Brett
Jones. Take your time and adjust, with or without a bell in your hand—but especially with a bell.
Practice this shoe get-up, drilled in stages and as a whole, until you own the movement.
Then, enter the kettlebell.
Pick Up, Set Down, Switch Sides
Lie on your right side, the kettlebell on the ground next to your ribs. Grip the handle with a twohanded pistol grip—the right holding the handle, the left reinforcing the right with a thumbless grip.
Roll onto your back with the kettlebell held tight against your lower ribs. Press the bell upward with
one or both arms.
Grip the handle medium hard. Keep the handle parallel to the callus line and wrap your thumb
around the handle. Keep your wrist straight—as you would when punching. If you let the wrist bend
back, you are telling the world you have never been in a street fight, you big sissy.
Reverse this process to set the bell back down.
To switch sides, perform a lying half-halo or sit up and spin around. Do not shift the kettlebell over
your chest or face.
Look at the bell during the get-up stages unless I tell you otherwise.
Shoulder Packing
The objective of the get-up is not simply standing up with a weight overhead, but doing it while
maintaining perfect shoulder mechanics.
Your shoulder is at its strongest and most resilient when it is “packed”—down and sucked into its
socket. To learn shoulder packing, raise your right arm overhead, then bend your elbow to reach your
mid-back. Restrain your elbow with your left hand and try to straighten out your right arm overhead.
Note that your shoulder has retreated into your body like a turtle’s head.
You must keep your elbow straight for the duration of the get-up. This is not for the sake of your
elbow, but for the sake of the shoulder—elbow flexion compromises shoulder packing. Visualize a
power source in the locked elbow. This sends energy up the forearm into the kettlebell and down into
the shoulder. Simultaneously, the arm is “growing longer” toward the kettlebell and pressing hard into
the shoulder socket.
It takes effort to keep your elbow straight; do not be lazy.
The left shoulder must be packed too. In this context, “packed” means being pressed down, away
from the ears. Revisit the anti-shrug from the short-stop drill in the deadlift section.
Learning to pack your shoulders and building packing strength will make your shoulders
bulletproof.
Breathing behind the Shield
Throughout the get-up, “breathe behind the shield,” as they say in some karate styles. Imagine lying
on your back with a large person sitting or even standing on your stomach. You would have to brace the
abs in order to not to get crushed, and then breathe behind that “shield.” The breathing would have to be
shallow, because deep breaths would collapse the shield. “Breathing behind the shield” enables high
trunk stability, typically associated with breath holding, while keeping the oxygen flowing.
Pavel Macek driving home “breathing behind the shield”
“The goal is to have good form, but do not stop there. Own your alignment and lift something,”
insists Gray Cook.
Get-up Standards
Task:
Get-up
Condition:
Lie on your back, pick up a kettlebell with both hands, and press it with one or both arms. Slowly
stand up, proceeding through a low sweep while keeping your loaded arm straight and vertical or
almost vertical. Assist yourself by pushing into the ground with the free arm. Slowly reverse the
movement from standing to lying.
Standards:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Use both hands to lift the kettlebell off the ground to the starting position of the floor
press and to return it to the ground at the end of the get-up.
The wrist on the kettlebell side is neutral.
The elbow on the kettlebell side is locked and the shoulder is packed.
The shoulder of the free arm does not shrug up.
The heel of the foot on the kettlebell side stays planted during the low sweep, the lunge
6.
7.
8.
9.
up to standing, and during the reverse of these actions.
The knee touches the deck silently on the descent into the half-kneeling position.
The arm holding the kettlebell is vertical or almost vertical.[3]
The neck is neutral for the top half of the movement—from the lunge up.
In the top position, the knees are locked and the lower back does not hyperextend.
The movement is smooth, without jerky transitions.
PART II: SIMPLE
PROGRAM MINIMUM REMASTERED
Get yourself a Glock and lose that nickel-plated sissy pistol.
—Tommy Lee Jones in U.S. Marshalls
The Glock pistol has a rare distinction of being the choice of gun-carrying professionals and the
number one pistol recommended to beginners at the same time.
In the 1980s, the Austrian armed forces announced a competition for a contract to replace an
obsolete WWII-era pistol. Gaston Glock, an engineer with no firearms experience, decided to try his
luck. As the story goes, a couple of colonels sniggered that “a man who made curtain rods for a living”
did not stand a chance. Herr Glock got mad and went to work. They say he test-fired his prototypes with
his left hand. That way, if a gun blew up he could still work on blueprints with his right.
This amateur proved the experts wrong. Unburdened by an insider’s knowledge of what was
possible and impossible, Glock designed a simple and sinister tool that had a lot fewer parts than its
competitors. The rest is history. Today Glock is the most popular handgun in the world, supplying twothirds of the law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and countless institutional and private customers
worldwide.
Like the Glock pistol, the Program Minimum (PM) was designed to be a great shooting program,
perfect for beginners, the advanced, and anyone in between. Like its Second Amendment counterpart,
the PM was designed by an outsider.
Steve Baccari is a hard man from Boston, an electrician by trade, a fighter by choice, a strength
coach by accident. Baccari does not suffer fools or fitness professionals gladly—or at all. He has no
tolerance for big words and the only proof he accepts is results.
Steve in the corner of young Peter Welch at Saint Patrick’s Day Boxing
This man with no formal education understands the scientific method—unlike so many people who
flaunt “transverse plane” and “Krebs cycle” jargon. He severely limits the number of variables and
tracks one while keeping the rest constant. Two groups of fighters of similar ability are doing the same
things—except for one variable for a certain number of weeks. The proof of what works better comes
out in the ring.
I have been to Steve’s basement, where I saw a thick stack of notebooks going back a couple of
decades. Over the course of his career, he tried everything and ruthlessly eliminated what did not work.
From his disciplined and unorthodox mind came the original Program Minimum.
Mad scientist’s notes
The PM was built with only two parts: the swing and the get-up. Baccari’s experience, and later that
of many others, has taught us that these two exercises supply the biggest bang for the kettlebell buck.
Like a Glock pistol of an earlier generation, the remastered PM is the same great product, refined.
Again.
First, I will lay out the program. Then I will explain the reasoning behind it.
PROVEN. POWERFUL. PERFECTED.
You know our motto: “We never let well enough alone.”
—Roger Zelazny, Roadmarks
The latest—fourth—iteration of the kettlebell Program Minimum is best described by the tag line
for the latest model of the battle tested F-16 fighter jet: “Proven. Powerful. Perfected.”
F-16: “Proven. Powerful. Perfected.”
Once you feel competent with the basic swing and get-up technique, here is the plan. It is simple as
could be: Just bang out 10 sets of each exercise daily, like brushing your teeth. All of your attention is
on technique and power, and zero brain cells need to be involved in analyzing the workout and planning
how to change it. What an opportunity to become an ultimate technician!
Weekly Schedule
Train almost daily, taking an occasional day off when your body or your schedule insists.
If you follow a high-load strength training regimen, seriously training for a sport, or have a
physically demanding occupation, do S&S two to three times a week. Do not expect to progress at the
same rate as a girevik or girevichka dedicating five to six times a week to Simple & Sinister.
Daily Schedule
Train at any time of the day.
Start with three circuits of mobility exercises—prying goblet squats, hip bridges, haloes.
As an option, you may follow these with a couple of sets of get-ups with exaggerated slowness and
precision with a shoe or a light kettlebell. Groove the movement. Instead of doing full get-ups, you may
select a particular phase, say supine to elbow, and polish it. Take the movement apart and put it back
together. This is not a warm-up, but a practice.
Do all your prescribed daily swings and then your get-ups.
Wrap up your training session with the stretches, the 90/90, and the QL straddle. Hang on a pullup
bar if you have one.
Swing Training
Always do 100 swings: 10 sets of 10 reps.
Every second or third training day, replace one-arm swings with two-arm swings using the same bell
or bells. Think of the latter as active rest. Back in the USSR, Olympic weightlifting authority Prof.
Anatoly Chernyak discovered that cutting back on weight and emphasizing power “creates favorable
conditions for recovery processes in the body.” Although the weight stays the same, it is a lot easier to
swing a given size kettlebell with two arms than with one. Focus on maximal explosiveness and a
forever float on top of each rep.
Do not hesitate to switch to two-arm swings when you are dragging your tail—and reap its many
benefits while giving your mind and grip a break.
Even if you are full of energy every day, do two-arm swings at least once out of every three
sessions.
Rotation of One-Arm and Two-Arm Swings: A Sample Month
Week
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thur
Fri
Sat
Sun
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
1
1
2
1
2
1
3
1
2
1
2
1
2
4
1
1
2
1
1
2
When we count swing reps, we add the number of times the kettlebell has gone up and pay no
attention to what the arms do.
So, on one-arm swing days, do 10L—rest—10R—rest x 5. On two-arm swing days, it is 10T x 10.
You must have guessed that “L,” “R,” and “T” stand for, respectively, “left,” “right,” “two-arm.”
Set Number
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
One-arm swing day
10L
10R
10L
10T
10T
10T
10R
10L
10R
10L
Two-arm swing day
10T
10T
10T
10T
10R
10L
10R
10T
10T
10T
For your one-arm swings, select a weight you can powerfully and competently swing for 10x10,
regardless of the time it takes. Let us call this weight “S.”
Do your 10 reps, park the bell, and rest.
To reiterate: Do NOT do 10 reps left and 10 right back to back; set the kettlebell down and recover
between the sides.
Rest actively by walking around. Breathe deep and slow, always inhaling through your nose and
exhaling completely, even exaggeratedly.
Do the next set when you have recovered enough to pass the so-called “talk test.” You must be able
to speak in short sentences. More about it later.
Give yourself even more rest than dictated by the talk test after the first couple of sets—the circuitry
that tells your body it needs more oxygen is slow to react at first.
When you have recovered enough to be able to speak normally in short sentences—and not a
moment sooner!—may you tackle your next set. It is imperative that you pass this talk test. If you are
not sure whether you have passed it, the answer is no; keep resting until you are beyond any doubt.
There are no time goals to hit in this phase of S&S training and no need to look at the clock.
Use chalk. Going without would severely limit the size of the kettlebell you can swing powerfully.
I will say it again: Use chalk. If you train at home and are worried about getting your nice carpet
dirty, reevaluate your priorities. If you train at a gym and they do not allow chalk, quit that sissy
establishment and find a respectable one.
For your two-arm swings, use the same bell. Obviously, it will be easier to swing a given-size bell
with two arms than with one arm. No problem, just swing it more powerfully, aiming for a long float on
the top of each rep.
As with the one-arm swings, let the talk test guide your recovery.
Justyna Macková, SFG Team Leader
Swing Progression
The only type of progression is in weight; the sets and the reps are constant. The power stays
maximal. The rest periods vary organically, regulated by the talk test.
Gradually replace the weight you “own” with a heavier one.
“Owning a weight” means being able to do the given sets and reps with perfect technique, any day
—without getting stressed out about it.
When you have established ownership of kettlebell “S,” start upgrading it to a heavier one: greater
than 4kg for women or 8kg for men. Let us call this bigger bell “S+.”
Replace “S” with “S+” 20 reps at a time—one set of 10 with the left and one with the right. On twoarm swing days also upgrade two sets of 10 to “S+.”
The type of progression where you up the load and then stay with it for a time is called step loading.
It is very powerful and reliable.
Week
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
Sample One-Arm Swing Progressions
Girevichka
Girevik
Just completed 4 weeks with 16kg x
Just completed 4 weeks with 24kg x
10/10
10/10
16kg x 10/8[4], 20kg x 10/2
24kg x 10/8, 32kg x 10/2
16kg x 10/6, 20kg x 10/4
24kg x 10/6, 32kg x 10/4
16kg x 10/4, 20kg x 10/6
24kg x 10/4, 32kg x 10/6
16kg x 10/2, 20kg x 10/8
24kg x 10/2, 32kg x 10/8
18
20kg x 10/10
32kg x 10/10
19
20
Two-arm swings are done on alternate training days with the same weight combinations as the onearm swings.
Start upgrading the weight from the third set, work your way to the end, and, finally, replace the first
two sets.
Roxanne “Sinister” Myers, SFG Team Leader
The Order of Replacing the Swing Weight with a Heavier One
Weeks
1
L
L
L
L
L
L
1–4
5–8
9–12
13–16
17–20
2
R
R
R
R
R
R
3
L
L
L
L
L
L
Set Number
5
6
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
4
R
R
R
R
R
R
7
L
L
L
L
L
L
8
R
R
R
R
R
R
9
L
L
L
L
L
L
10
R
R
R
R
R
R
The progression presumes you have just completed four weeks with weight “S.”
“L” and “R” refer to left- and right-arm swings.
The black cells represent weight “S;” the grey cells weight “S+.”
Use the same weight combinations for two-arm swings.
Here is an example of how two-arm swings copy the one-arm swing progression:
Monday
Tuesday
L
T
R
T
L
T
R
T
L
T
R
T
L
T
R
T
L
T
R
T
If Your Grip Gives You Trouble
Once you increase the weight, you might discover your grip is not up to the task of holding strong
for 10 explosive swings. The solution is the old-school bodybuilding technique of “rest/pause.”
If you sense that your grip starts going before finishing 10 reps, park the bell. Rest for 10–30
seconds while loosening up your forearm by pretending to shake water off your fingertips. Then finish
your set. Whether you have managed 5+5, 7+3, or any other sum of 10 reps, you should have no
problem converting this split set into a strong nonstop 10 by the end of the four weeks you are supposed
to stay with the given load.
Fight the urge to add extra grip work or to make all your swings one-arm. Pavel Macek warns:
“Many folks struggling with grip add extra grip training—only to get worse. Grip is neurologically very
demanding; it needs rest, it needs lighter sessions, and the two-arm swings facilitate this. Less is, in this
case, often more.”
Swing Rinse and Repeat
Now your one-arm swings are back where you started—10x10, only with a heavier bell.
“Rinse and repeat,” as our Director of Education Brett Jones likes to say.
You may have noticed I am not holding you to the five-minute time limit—not yet. Not until you are
toying with the Simple weights with generous talk-test rests.
Get-Up Training
An S&S training session is not a circuit; do all sets of swings before moving on to get-ups.
Always do five get-up sets per arm, alternating sides every set. As with swings, walk around
between sets breathing deeply and slowly until you can pass the talk test. Do not lie around like a
beached whale.
Get-Up Progression
The weight you own is called “G.”
The weight you will gradually replace it with is “G+.” As with the swings, it is 4kg heavier for
ladies and 8kg for gents.
My stunt double Pavel Macek warns that when you take such a big weight jump in the get-up, the
kettlebell’s center of mass will noticeably move away from your forearm, somewhat altering the
exercise groove. Be ready.
The get-up progression is identical to the swing progression.
Week
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
Sample Get-Up Progressions
Girevichka
Girevik
Just completed 4 weeks with 8kg x 1/5
Just completed 4 weeks with 16kg x 1/5
8kg x 1/4, 12kg x 1/1
16kg x 1/4, 24kg x 1/1
8kg x 1/3, 12kg x 1/2
16kg x 1/3, 24kg x 1/2
8kg x 1/2, 12kg x 1/3
16kg x 1/2, 24kg x 1/3
8kg x 1/1, 12kg x 1/4
16kg x 1/1, 24kg x 1/4
17
18
19
20
12kg x 1/5
24kg x 1/5
As with swings, start increasing the weight from the third set, work your way to the last set, and
finish the progression by replacing the first two sets.
The Order of Replacing the Get-Up Weight with a Heavier One
Set Number
Weeks
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
1–4
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
5–8
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
9–12
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
13–16
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
17–20
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
• The progression presumes you have just completed four weeks with weight “G.”
• “L” and “R” refer to left- and right-arm get-ups.
• The black cells represent weight “G;” the grey cells weight “G+.”
Get-Up Rinse and Repeat
Same as the swing. You know the drill.
Customize the Rate of Progression
Is there ever a reason to advance faster or slower than specified above, four weeks per step?
Slower, yes, if you do not yet own the previous step. You may not add heavier sets until you
dominate the given weight combination.
Faster, only if you are a seasoned athlete highly in tune with your body.
You might run into a situation where the two lifts are progressing at different rates. This is very
common. It is your choice whether to advance them independently or hold up the rabbit to let the turtle
catch up.
As for the weight increases, some students may be uncomfortable with our preferred large jumps in
the get-up—4kg for ladies and 8kg for gentlemen. Get extra bells and jump half as high, 2kg and 4kg,
respectively. Accordingly, shorten the steps from four to two weeks.
Raye “Sinister” Johnston, StrongFirst Elite
Two Sample Get-Up Progressions for a Girevik
Week
4kg jumps
8kg jumps
1
24kg x 1/4, 28kg x 1/1
2
24kg x 1/4, 32kg x 1/1
3
24kg x 1/3, 28kg x 1/2
4
5
24kg x 1/2, 28kg x 1/3
6
24kg x 1/3, 32kg x 1/2
7
24kg x 1/1, 28kg x 1/4
8
9
28kg x 1/5
24kg x 1/2, 32kg x 1/3
10
11
28kg x 1/4, 32kg x 1/1
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
28kg x 1/3, 32kg x 1/2
24kg x 1/1, 32kg x 1/4
28kg x 1/2, 32kg x 1/3
28kg x 1/1, 32kg x 1/4
32kg x 1/5
32kg x 1/5
A Jolt
Once or twice a month, take on any physical challenge that will test your spirit without breaking
your body.
Timeless Simple: When You Own the Simple Weights
Keep repeating the above progression until you are able to do 10x10 one-arm swings and 5x1 getups per arm using Simple weights, with rests dictated by the talk test.
If you are healthy, pay attention to detail and have patience; there is an excellent chance you will
own these weights, regardless of your age or bodyweight. I strongly urge you to pursue this goal. While
you will benefit from lighter bells, the real magic takes place with the Simple and heavier ones.
Note: I am not talking about meeting the Simple timed target—100 swings in five minutes plus 10
get-ups in 10…yet. I am referring to lifting the Simple weights for the above sets and reps in a time
determined by the talk test. Let us refer to this milestone as Timeless Simple. In the same vein, when
you can do it with Sinister weights, you will have reached Timeless Sinister.
When you own Timeless Simple, advance to “Go,” collect $200, and proceed to Part III, Sinister,
for further instructions.
Onto the method behind the madness.
A LESSON FROM WORKERS AND PEASANTS
Muscles are given to a man not for admiration but for work.
—Prof. Arkady Vorobyev and Yuri Sorokin
Steve Justa is what Marty Gallagher calls an “agro-American.” A self-taught strongman from a
Nebraska farm, his book Rock, Iron, Steel, published by IronMind, is a fascinating insight into what a
smart man unburdened by formal education can come up with. In the story that follows, Justa reinvents
Prof. Yuri Verkhoshansky’s revolutionary anti-glycolytic training.
Glycolysis is the sugar burning that supplies faddish “high intensity interval training” and
“metcons.” This highly inefficient process pollutes your body with lactic acid, ammonia, and free
radicals and messes with your hormones if you tap into it too much or too often.
Anti-glycolytic training, in contrast, relies on the clean burning “rocket fuel” of creatine phosphate
(CP) to power high intensity efforts and an equally clean aerobic system to replenish the CP. AGT is the
latest frontier in training for performance and health.
Justa, a muscular 250-pounder with 10 years of lifting experience, was taught a lesson when he got a
job at a foundry. One day he had to take over the station of a worker who had gotten sick, a scrawny
140-pounder. The job entailed clearing warm steel blocks weighing up to 300 pounds from sticky sand
by hammering them, picking them up, shaking and dropping them…for the entire shift.
Justa recalls, “After a couple of hours of this, I was a wreck, physically and mentally, and I kept
seeing a picture in my mind of the guy who usually did this job. He was skinny as a rail and he never
even worked up a sweat when he was doing this job…”
That day, Steve Justa committed to work on his stamina. But what he had in mind was very different
from a puke circuit or a high-rep burnout. He decided to do many low-rep sets with a moderately heavy
weight:
…not to the point of huffing and puffing, but to the point where I could do the movement over
and over again for three to five hours if called upon. Of course, take adequate rest between sets,
but not so very much rest, and use sets where you’re just slightly tired at the end of them.
I am not going to try to convince you to do swings for five hours (even though Russian scientists
concluded that the ability to sustain a given workload for an hour and more is an indicator that the
training is truly anti-glycolytic). I do want you to take note of the working man’s attitude of training as a
job. Contrast his mindset with that prevailing among the trainees who fancy themselves hardcore: prey
fluttering and desperately trying to save its life.
Here is how to apply the blue-collar frame of mind to swings and get-ups. Think of yourself as a
contractor with a job of 100 of one and 10 of the other. If it is a job, you naturally want to finish it as
quickly as possible, punch out, and go out for beer and pizza. On the other hand, you are not in the
mood to kill yourself to the point where you fall asleep with your face in a double pepperoni and extra
cheese. And you remember you have another job waiting tomorrow—and the day after, and one after
that.
No Workers and Peasants’ Paradise
Should you get the impression that I am promoting naturalistic training methods such as manual
labor, I am not.
Some forms of it are excellent general exercise. Elite boxing and kickboxing coach Andrey Dolgov
used to send his fighters out to the countryside on Boy Scout–type missions. They would knock on old
ladies’ doors and volunteer to saw and chop firewood.
But more often than not, I would not recommend manual labor as training. Most forms of it
develop the body in an asymmetrical manner. Some flat-out cause injuries. Many lack the intensity
needed to build real strength.
A few decades ago, Soviet scientists brought a bunch of sturdy farm boys to the city with the
intention of turning them into weightlifting champions. To the authorities’ big disappointment, the
collective farmers did not do any better than the city-slickers. Not worse, certainly, just not better.
I am not prescribing a worker’s or a peasant’s “training”—only his mindset.
Not the best way to get strong.
FLIP THE CRAZY SWITCH
All weakness is a weakness of will.
—Friedrich Nietzsche
…and then there are times to hold nothing back.
I was talking to my close friend John Faas, a U.S. military special operator who would later get
killed in action in Afghanistan. He was barely 30, but his body was already beaten up by multiple
deployments. He reminded me of the prizefighter in one of O’Henry’s short stories: “bony of cheek and
jaw, scarred, toughened, broken and reknit, indestructible, grisly, gladiatorial as a hornet…”
An American hero. SOC (SEAL Operator, Chief) John Faas.
KIA August 6, 2011, Afghanistan.
As we were discussing the way he was dealing with his injuries, he summed it up with a line from a
country song by Toby Keith: “I’m not as good as I once was, but I am as good once as I ever was.”
That was it. The injured sailor was training in a restrained manner, saving himself for when it
mattered—in combat. Training in a “punch the clock” manner, but always mentally ready to “flip the
crazy switch” is the choice of a professional warrior.
Even if you are not a warrior and are not injured, this is a solid philosophy for training and life.
There comes a time when training is over and you have to find out what you are made of. Carl Jung
observed, as did many before and after him, “Man needs difficulties; they are necessary for health.”
While redlining your heart and flooding your body with lactic acid is not something one should do
regularly, an occasional jolt of this sort is highly beneficial to a healthy person to bust through a plateau.
As suggested by some research, it might kill defective cells and their components that could cause a lot
of trouble if allowed to stick around undead. Learn or remind yourself how to stay comfortable while
being miserable.
The swing is a perfect exercise for a Monty Python–type with a strong spirit but a broken body. Bud
Jeffries writes:
The swing allowed me to work around a significant knee injury and a significant shoulder and
biceps injury I got from grappling. The swing will allow most people to work around a wide range
of injuries or keep going even with “high miles” because it doesn’t force you to move into extreme
positions.
There are a great many exercises that force the body into unnatural positions or to tolerate
unnatural amounts of force in unusual ways, or that simply don’t work for certain people. The
swing, however, creates all the strength benefits and 10 times the endurance benefits for most
people with little or no pounding on the body. It’s very easy on the body and, in fact, is a builder to
the body instead of a damager.
Tracy Reifkind and Bud Jeffries describe crazy swing quests in their books, The Swing and I Will Be Iron, respectively.
Being broken is not a pre-requisite for the trial by swings.
Once you have become strong enough to one-arm swing the Simple kettlebell for 10x10 with the
talk test, the five-minute swing test, and practicing for it, will provide difficulties in spades. Meanwhile,
challenge yourself once or twice a month in a variety of ways. Help a friend move. Shovel snow for the
entire block. Take out your dusty boxing gloves and call up your old sparring partners. Run up a
mountain with a backpack. Enter a 10K race. Farmer-carry your kettlebells for distance. Take on any
physical challenge that will test your spirit without breaking your body.
You might be wondering, why wait until you own the Simple kettlebell? Why not swing hard
against the clock right off the bat?
Because that would be stupid and irresponsible.
Fatigue stress-proofs and even enhances skills that are solid—while annihilating fragile semi-skills
and forming bad habits that are hard to break. To use a boxing analogy, a novice has no business doing
hard rounds on a heavy bag like a pro. He should practice his punches and combinations while fresh—
and develop his endurance with less specific exercises like running, jumping rope, and pushups.
Brandon Hetzler, a researcher from Missouri State University and former Senior SFG instructor, did 2,001 nonstop hard style
swings with 24kg in 49:21. That, ladies and gentlemen, is one harsh way to test your spirit.
(PROFESSIONAL DRIVER ON A CLOSED COURSE. DO NOT ATTEMPT.)
Nicole “Sinister” Davies
A LITTLE EVERY DAY GOES A LONG WAY
More is not better, it’s just more.
—Steve Baccari
A decade and a half ago, Michael Castrogiovanni, today an SFG Team Leader, identified the swing
workload that gives the most for the least: 100 swings, total.
Once you reach a certain volume of work, you hit the point of diminishing returns. The human body
is a non-linear system. Doubling your swings from 100 to 200 will not double the results—and will
even reduce them in some areas.
Michael Castrogiovanni, SFG Team Leader
Since StrongFirst puts a premium on strength and power, limiting the swing volume to 100 reps is
imperative.
Within our bodies, there is a fierce competition for resources between strength and endurance
adaptations. And, apart from the narrow specialists on both ends of the spectrum such as powerlifters
and marathoners, most people’s lives demand both strength and endurance.
Prof. Arkady Vorobyev established that exceeding a certain volume of strength or power exercise
arrests the development of these qualities and only promotes endurance. Experiments on weightlifters
revealed that 100 reps per exercise class per training session was the maximal total before this bias
toward endurance became severe.
100 reps are not just a nice round number.
Increasing the reps per set would be just as counterproductive.
Do more reps than 10—and turn your training into an acid bath, with your power tanking on the spot
and your energy the day after.
Given our organization’s name, StrongFirst, it goes without saying that we keep the reps low in
order not to water down strength and power. In the swings, we could have gone even lower than 10—
fives produce more power and less acid than 10s and are more in line with Verkhoshansky’s classic antiglycolytic training model—but we would have missed out on some important adaptations, such as
muscle hypertrophy.
The get-up, due to its semi-static nature and long time under tension, demands much lower sets and
reps. Five times one per side look deceptively easy on paper, but hit home once you do them with
correct technique and decent weight. Five get-up singles per side keep the muscles under tension for as
long as 5x8 bench presses—a serious workload proven through the history of the iron game to build
muscle and might.
Rachel “Wolf” Darvas, SFG Team Leader, the graphic designer of this book
Another vital reason to keep the rep count low, per set and per training session, is to leave enough
energy for other things—practicing sport skills, being ready to fulfill your duty on the battlefield or just
enjoying your day and not dragging your tail through it.
Bulgarian elite gymnastics coach Ivan Ivanov believes that the purpose of a training session is to
“store energy” in the body rather than exhaust it. That is a powerful mindset. In Ivanov’s experience,
100 repetitions per explosive movement hit the spot—and these must be done daily.
It may seem strange to recommend training without days off when the goal is storing energy, but
moderate daily training will keep the muscles’ fuel tanks topped off, while making tissues resistant to
microtrauma and almost soreness-proof. It is the ticket to being always ready.
Prof. Vorobyev explains that incomplete restoration training stimulates the recovery ability; your
body literally has to learn how to recoup faster…or else. Those who have served in the military can
relate. You got sore after your first day in basic training, but you persisted—as if you had a choice—and
kept up with the daily grind of pushups and runs, and finally you could handle it. If you were given the
unlikely choice of PT-ing only when you had totally recovered, you still would have been stiff, sore, and
a sissy. This is why the S&S program, while tolerating a minimum of two workouts a week if you are in
a pickle, prescribes near-daily training.
Think of the S&S regimen not as a workout but as a recharge.
One of the meanings of the verb “to work out” is “to exhaust by extraction.” Ponder that for a
moment and ask yourself if that is your goal. In contrast, “recharge” is the name Russians gave to an
invigorating morning exercise session. Out with a workout, in with a recharge!
Another plus of having a training regimen that does not push limits—you can stay on it for a long,
long time. The internet rages with the debate of how often one should change a training plan.
It depends.
The more intense the training, the more often the program needs to be changed. For instance, if your
deadlift plan is to work up to a max single once a week, it is only sustainable for two to six weeks, with
experienced strength athletes on the low end of that range and newbies on the high. This is why lifters
who follow the Westside Barbell system that prescribes weekly maxing change the exercises every
week or two.
On the other hand, you can stay on Justa’s singles routine, which calls for up to 15 daily singles with
a mere 70% of the one-rep max, for as long as you want. I have met gents who casually took their
deadlifts from 400 to 500 in a year on this “easy strength” plan.
You can stick to S&S and keep making gains for a long, long time. The bottleneck is not the
program, but the practitioner’s ability to stay on task and not get distracted by the pop fitness noise.
LIFT NO FASTER THAN YOU CAN TALK
Time is a man’s best friend if he makes good use of it and a man’s worst enemy if he lets it run
him. Most people who live by the clock are miserable sorts of critters. But living by the sun, that is
something different.
—Clifford Simak, Out of Their Minds
Before World War II, Oxford professor John Grayson taught mountaineers to “climb no faster than
you can talk.” This rule of thumb would eventually come to be known as the talk test.
Failing the talk test—not being able to speak in short sentences—means lactic acid is accumulating
faster than the body can dispose of it. You are relying more on burning sugar without oxygen: anaerobic
glycolysis. It is counterproductive to both ends of the S&S goal spectrum of power and conditioning.
Passing the talk test before the next set serves both of these seemingly contradictory goals.
For power, enough CP has been replenished aerobically to enable your fast twitch fibers to contract
explosively. A failed talk test indicates that the creatine phosphate tanks have not been adequately
refilled and the next set will rely heavily on glycolysis. Beloved by “Tabata” junkies, glycolysis is 1.5–2
times weaker than the CP system. So much for power.
Listen to Rif:
I come from a gymnastics and powerlifting background, and I like my rest. I prefer to start my
next set when my heart rate has come down a bit and I can put my all into the next set…I don’t
want to rob the next set of intensity by starting out of breath. The talk test is solid.
Mark Reifkind, Master SFG
Passing the talk test indicates that lactate is not accumulating out of control and the metabolic
environment is optimal for stimulating endurance adaptations. Endurance specialists know that these
conditions—just a little acid to keep the aerobic metabolism humming but not enough to overwhelm it
—are the key to developing championship stamina. Contrary to the HIIT propaganda, running at a
speed that allows talking—just below the lactic threshold—is the most crucial component of serious
endurance athletes’ training.
Per Verkhoshansky, the above applies to repeated high-power efforts just as much as it does to lower
intensity steady-state exercise.
What would happen if you rested more or less than allowed by the talk test?
If you rest more, you will slightly gain on the power side and lose some endurance benefits, not to
mention time.
If you rest less—sucking wind and letting your muscles burn—you will give your conditioning and
body composition a short-term boost because your system perceives intense glycolysis as an emergency.
But it must be done very sparingly—and only after building an aerobic base with talk-test restrained
training. Overdo glycolytic work and there will be hell to pay.
In summary, the sweet spot of just passing the talk test is optimal for meeting the wide range of S&S
goals, but if in doubt, it is better to rest more than less.
For American readers, a proven passage to recite for the talk test is the Pledge of Allegiance:
I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it
stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
Rif continues:
My way of training the swing is looking at the volume and intensity and not worrying so much
about the rest intervals. These will naturally diminish as work capacity and fitness improves.
As you get into a better aerobic condition, your rest periods will decrease organically over a long
haul, while fluctuating from day to day. Without apps and gadgets, the low-tech, high-concept talk test
listens to your body and adjusts the rest periods in response to stress, fatigue, and everything else going
on in your life.
Obey the talk test and do not forcefully cut your rest periods!
I know, I said it before. And I will say it again; it is that critical.
You probably would like to know how you stack against other gireviks. How long are you
“supposed to” rest before passing the talk test?
There is no cut and dry answer. On one hand, the better your aerobic conditioning, the faster your
recovery. On the other, the greater power you generate with each rep, the more CP fuel you burn,
necessitating more rest. It is not unusual for a very powerful athlete to take half an hour to complete
10x10 max power swings guided by the talk test.
Even the Sinister finishers do not offer any numbers to shoot for in your daily S&S practice. When
they have completed their 100 swings in five minutes, their power was high—but not maximal, as their
day-to-day talk test regulated training. The chapter Hard Style Laziness in Part III will clarify this.
Let Pavel Macek, who has met the Sinister swing golden standard—10x10 with 48kg within five
minutes—at a bodyweight less than 150 pounds, put your mind at ease about longer rests:
During my regular S&S practice, I always give myself plenty of rest—more than I feel I need. A
relatively long rest period allows me to do an absolutely explosive set of 10 hard style swings with
a “one punch, one kill” mentality. I only time my rest periods during the test days, and I don’t ‘try’
to hit the standard (100 hard style swings in five minutes). I am 100% sure I can do it, so I just do
it.
The results of this strategy? In addition to the desired conditioning effect, I experience more
strength and power and less soreness. On my 40th birthday, exactly one year after I started S&S, I
did 40 consecutive one-arm swings with the Beast. The session looked like this: 20 with my left,
switch, 20 with my right, set down, celebration dance.
To sum up, there is no rest period to qualify you as a stud or studette. Do not look at the clock at all.
Doing so could only provoke wrong decisions. Listen to your body and your breath—not your watch or
phone.
You might wonder, where does the rest/pause—a 10–30 second break in the middle of a set of heavy
10 one-arm swings in which the grip is giving you trouble—fit into the conversation about recovery.
When your grip starts going under these conditions, it means the muscles are starting to run low on
creatine phosphate. Although it takes a good five minutes to fully replenish this rocket fuel, a noticeable
amount of CP is refilled very rapidly, not enough to power another set of 10—but sufficient to finish the
one you had to interrupt. For accounting purposes, we treat these split 10 reps as a single set and accept
that we are not going to pass the talk test in the middle.
STEP LOADING FOR MAXIMAL RELIABILITY
…the best way to enjoy training, maintain freedom from injury, and keep your marbles without
employing complex mathematical formulas for ever-changing lifting percentages is to simply stick
with constant weights for long periods of time!
—John McKean, old-school powerlifter and all-around lifter
The Glock does not have a safety switch. Once the round is chambered, the weapon is ready to fire.
Professionals consider this an asset, not a liability. Flipping a tiny safety switch is a fine motor skill. No
big deal in the safety of the range; it is a very different matter in a life-threatening situation.
Do you want to be always ready? Practice dialing 911 in the dark after a hard set of swings. I am
dead serious. In a stressful situation, fine motor skills are compromised. There are many documented
cases of people fumbling, unable to call the police. This is why security experts recommend practicing
this simple “skill.”
Racking the slide and sending the round into the chamber, on the other hand, is a gross motor skill.
With practice, you can do it quickly with greater reliability than flipping the dainty safety switch. And
you will gain a psychological advantage: The clanking of the slide acts like a warning shot to whoever
intends to harm you.
To maximize the program’s reliability, I purposefully removed the equivalent of the safety switch
from S&S, namely load variability or “waviness,” as Russians call it.
Soviet coaches learned through trial and error that the higher the volume or intensity, the “wavier”
the programming needs to be. In other words, the harder you push on the heavy days, the easier the light
days should be.
The reverse is also true. If you do not have heavy days, you do not need light days. Ditto for heavy
and light weeks.
This programming equivalent of getting rid of the safety switch is called step loading.
In the name of “progressive overload,” most trainees ambitiously add weight and reps or reduce
their rest periods. This leads to quick gains, followed by the mother of all plateaus or, worse, injuries
and overtraining. In response, coaches developed deloading tactics: light days and weeks. These tactics
work—but they are anything but simple or foolproof.
On the other hand, if you do not overload, you do not have to deload. That is the beauty of step
loading. Select a comfortably hard training load (weight, sets, reps, rest periods) and stay with it until it
feels almost easy—you own it. Only then move up.
Half a century ago, top Soviet specialists Profs. Matveev, Ozolin, and Platonov concluded that a
load stabilization followed by a stepwise increase was a highly effective and reliable progression
strategy.
Step loading (top) and wave loading (bottom), as illustrated in a classic textbook by Prof. Leonid Matveev. The solid lines
represent volume and the dotted lines, intensity. Both progressions can be sinister—but step loading defines simple.
They were not alone or first. Many old-time strongmen practiced “constant working poundage
training.” Bodybuilding author Stuart McRobert explains:
For months at a time, they would continue to knock out their usual…work sets of however
many reps they chose for a given exercise. The poundages would tax them, but never push them to
the limit.
A few times a year though, when they felt good and perhaps motivated by competition (formal
or informal), they would pull out the stops and try for new personal bests with limit weights. Then
they would increase their regular working weights a little for the next stretch of their training lives.
They would still keep the poundages less than their limit weights for the reps they were doing, but
hold them until they started to feel not-quite-so-taxing. Then another record day would be lined up,
and, if records were made, some new working poundages (just a few pounds heavier than before)
would be used for the next few months, or longer.
Elite gymnastics coach and author of excellent book Building the Gymnastic Body, Christopher
Sommer, calls this type of progression by a different name—“steady state”—yet it is the same good ole’
step loading:
Steady state is by far the best training cycle I have ever developed for use with my athletes…
only add [load] approximately every 8–12 weeks and then only after the athlete has progressed
through an adaptive training cycle of perceived overload (hard effort), load (medium effort), and
under-load (easy effort).
In my opinion, the most common yet serious flaw in the thinking of most coaches, trainers, and
athletes is that they neglect to allow enough time in the under-load stage, or recovery stage, where
the level of effort is physically perceived as being relatively easy. This is actually a crucial part of
any training cycle, allowing the current gains to be solidified....
By utilizing a correctly established steady state training cycle, physical injuries will be
practically non-existent, as will be mental burnout from psychological stress.
The duration of each “step” may vary from one week to several months; in S&S, it is four weeks.
Step loading is highly reliable and very rewarding. You add a couple of sets of heavier swings and getups today and they challenge you. You stick with them for a month and they feel lighter and lighter.
Step loading is an adult training progression. It weeds out impatient juveniles unable to stay on task.
The latter worry that flatlining for a month is a waste of time. Fret not, sons and daughters. You are
still making progress when you are repeating the same workload over and over. If this were not true,
logging and similar jobs would not make men out of boys, and, undeniably, they do. You are
“solidifying your gains,” as old-time lifters used to say.
Leading Soviet sport biochemist Prof. Nikolay Yakovlev discovered that extended training leads to
reconstruction on the cellular level that is deeper and more profound than one caused by short-term
stimuli. The result is a stable foundation upon which future performance breakthroughs will be made.
Besides, if the idea of camping out with the same weights for a month drives you up the wall, there
are ways of making your exercises much harder without increasing the weight, reps, or density: speed
up your swings, slow down your get-ups, use pristine technique in both. See the Harder is Better
chapter in Part III.
The standard rate of S&S step progression is 0.2kg per week for ladies and 0.4kg for gentlemen—
about half a pound and a pound, respectively. It does not sound like much until you realize that in a
year, it adds up to a 45-pound barbell plate for gents and half that for ladies. It means advancing from a
total beginner to an impressive Timeless Simple specimen.
Avoid the other extreme of setting up permanent residence with baby weights. Fabio Zonin, Master
SFG, stresses that the specific length of a loading step aims to prevent excesses on both ends: rushing
and going nowhere. Sinister Anna scoffs, “Spending months swinging 16kg for men...no bueno.”
A LEAP OF FAITH BETWEEN WEIGHTS
Both non-organic and organic nature are characterized by a so-called step function change.
[Functions] are constant in select intervals, but they change from interval to interval with a leap.
—Prof. Arkady Vorobyev
When they first encounter Russian kettlebells, Westerners are always surprised at the large jumps
between sizes. Back in the Soviet Union, the classic kettlebell set for men was an ultra-minimalist 16,
24, 32kg and no one was asking for more choices. The original reason for limited sizes was probably as
mundane as saving rubles and a square meter of storage space. As science caught up with practice,
multiple reasons emerged why it is the best way.
First, Prof. Arkady Vorobyev, also a weightlifting world and Olympic champion, discovered that
sharp changes in load are superior to baby steps when it comes to delivering the message to your body:
“Get strong!”
Conversion of chemical energy into mechanical, electromagnetic, and thermal energy also
happens stepwise. Discrete changes on sub-cellular and cellular levels are most likely one of the
characteristics of live organisms…we propose sudden yet fitting the given athlete’s functional
abilities changes in load—jumps…This principle of organizing the training loads allows one to
achieve higher results with a smaller loading volume.
Second, big jumps defeat the “tyranny of choice.” Dan John explains:
Why I like kettlebells: I have so little choice. Dumbbells in many gyms go up by 10 pounds,
some five, some even a pound at a time. A thousand machines for bench presses…a million
combos.
Stop! The brain can only take so much!
With kettlebells, I really have only up to three choices for an exercise…often only one.
Less choice, less mental RAM going out the door. The more you choose, the less you have left
to push the workout…
No choice. More work.
Third, Mark Toomey noted that a very gradual progression in weight enables the trainee to “sneak
up” on a heavier bell through muscle hypertrophy, robbing him of technical “a-ha” moments.
Fourth, aggressive jumps enforce taking the time to assert the ownership of the current training
weight. There is no way to advance to the next kettlebell other than by dominating the previous one.
Fifth, baby steps deprive one of an opportunity to man or woman up against a heavy weight.
Russian powerlifting coaches occasionally hold an in-house competition for their lifters, allowing only
one attempt per lift. There is no comfort of feeling your way up with incremental increases. Applied to
kettlebells, say, you want to make a transition from doing get-ups with 24kg to 32kg. That is a 33%
jump, a true leap of faith.
Some mathematically inclined types will point out that there is a big difference between jumping
4kg from 8 to 12kg (50%) and 28 to 32kg (14%). This may be so in the sterile world of arithmetic, but
life with its messiness adds corrections.
A lady doing get-ups with 8kg is a newbie and this weight is probably way below her current
strength. She has to start too light to learn the moves. Hence the 4kg weight increase represents way less
than 50% of her strength. Once she has gotten the groove, she is unlikely to have any trouble jumping
straight to 12kg. Ditto for a gent going up from 16kg to 24kg.
For all the irrefutable arguments in favor of large weight increases, they are not for everyone. Pavel
Macek points out that in the get-up, some folks get psyched out with the S&S recommended jumps. At
the very least, they need a good spotter. At the most, they should cut the size of the weight increase in
half—down to 2kg for ladies and 4kg for gents—and half the duration of each step as well.
An aggressive weight increase in the one-arm swing might present a problem with the grip, but it is
easily solved with the rest/pause technique and rarely requires halving the amount of added weight.
There is no reason you have to be limited to one option or the other—2kg versus 4kg for ladies and
4kg versus 8kg for gentlemen. You may mix and match. For instance, you could advance your get-ups
in small steps and your swing in large leaps. Or, start your S&S journey with small increases, advance
to big ones, then go back to small ones later if your progress slows down.
TIMELESS SIMPLE SUMMARIZED
Simplify, simplify.
—Henry David Thoreau
One “simplify” would have sufficed.
—Ralph Waldo Emerson, in response
1.
Always loaded
Treat your kettlebell as if it is always loaded.
2.
Practice
S&S is not a workout; it is a practice in moving strong.
3.
Schedule
Train almost daily, taking an occasional day off when your body or your schedule insists.
4.
Warm-up
Do three circuits of five reps of prying goblet squats, hip bridges, and haloes. As an option,
follow up with several get-ups with a shoe or a light weight.
5.
Swing training
Do 10/10 one-arm swings, the sum of both arms. Express maximal power in every rep; do not
hold back. Do not confuse power with cadence. Use chalk.
Every second or third training day replace one-arm swings with two-arm swings with the same
weight(s).
6.
Get-up training
Do 1/5 get-ups per arm. Do not rush through the movement.
7.
Cool-down
Do one to three sets of passive stretches—the 90/90 stretch and the QL straddle. Hang on a
pullup bar if you have one.
8.
Rest between sets
Rest actively. Walk around, shake off the tension, do finger extensions with a rubber band.
Breathe calmly and deeply, always inhaling through your nose and exhaling completely, even
exaggeratedly. Do the next set of swings or get-ups when you have recovered enough to pass the
talk test.
If your grip challenges you in heavier one-arm swings, stop the set before compromising
quality. Rest for 10–30 seconds while loosening up your forearm by pretending to shake water off
your fingertips, then finish the set.
9.
Progression
Gradually replace the weight you own with a heavier one.
Use the same step progression in both lifts. Replace one set per arm with a heavier weight
(+4kg for women and +8kg for men) every four weeks.
Start upgrading the weights from the third set, work your way to the end, and finish with the
first two sets.
10.
Jolt
Once or twice a month take on any physical challenge that will test your spirit without breaking
your body.
Timeless Simple Goals
Women
100 one-arm swings (sum of arms) in sets of 10
24kg
Five get-ups per arm (in sets of one) after the swings
16kg
Rest between sets regulated by the talk test
Men
32kg
32kg
Why People Fail on S&S
by Pavel Macek, Master SFG
Can’t read and follow simple orders.
Test instead of practice. I very seldom looked at the clock, I just enjoyed the exercise.
Sometimes I suspect I had really long rests between sets—1.5 minutes, maybe two minutes,
or even longer.
Start too heavy and do not build up the momentum.
Add heavier sets too soon.
Not enough bells.
Not enough training sessions per week. In the beginning, five or six times per week is
perfect—later, four times per week or one day on, one day off. Many practice only two or
three times per week, which is not enough. No practice, no miracles.
Do not use the “light” [two-arm swing] day option—in my humble opinion, a
frequently overlooked part of the program.
Do not use chalk.
Change the program or add to the program—gents doing S&S with 16kg, but adding
pushups and pullups and this and that.
When hitting the wall, keep banging the wall with their heads instead of taking a
step back and going up again. (Since this applies primarily to weights above Simple, we
will discuss deloading in Part III.—PT)
No patience to stick to the program. They get bored after two or three months. For me,
no change was an advantage: save the brain power, 100 swings and 10 get-ups, almost
daily…done—lots of time and juice for martial arts or life.
PART III: SINISTER
ADVANCE TO “GO,” COLLECT $200
And suddenly the Hindu Kush was easy.
—Michael Yilek, U.S. Army scout sniper, shortly
after starting hard style kettlebell training
You have conquered the Timeless Simple. Respect. You have stuck to a “boring” program for many
months and achieved a major milestone. Most people never get this far; they get distracted by the latest
fad and lose their way.
Michael Yilek down range
With a solid base of strength and skill, you are ready to pursue the time-based standards of Simple,
Sinister, and every bell in between. Here is how.
Once you own Timeless Simple, the schedule mutates slightly to fit your greater power and strength.
Cut the training frequency back from nearly daily to three to four times a week:
Mon
X
Simple & Sinister Schedule Choices
Tue
Wed
Thur
Fri
Sat
X
X
Sun
X
X
X
X
Streamline your warm-up. If your hip extension is crisp and perfect on the top of each swing
without any preliminaries, you can drop the hip bridge. If your shoulders are always well oiled at all
get-up stages, haloes can go too.
By all means, keep the goblet squat. If your hips are moving freely, reduce the number of prying sets
to one and do the remaining two sets with a heavier kettlebell or two with a brief pause on the bottom
but no prying.
For example, 16kg x 5 (prying), 32kg x 5/2 (pause briefly on the bottom and stand up)
or
16kg x 5 (prying), 24kg x 5 (paused), 32kg x 5 (paused)
Aim to bring your non-prying, paused goblet squat weight in line with your one-arm swing weight.
As you are getting stronger and more conditioned, the likelihood of hitting a plateau increases, even
with the glacial progression of step loading. If you have been doing everything by the book yet your
progress has stalled, it is time to introduce the classic powerlifting tactic of backing off.
Simply drop down a bell size or two for a few weeks, then build up again.
Sample Deload and Continued Progression from Pavel Macek
Week
1
2
3
4
5
Stalled at 40kg x 10/6, 48kg x 10/4
32kg x 10/10
40kg x 10/10
40kg x 10/8, 48kg x 10/2
40kg x 10/6, 48kg x 10/4
Even if gains keep coming, you may choose to back off occasionally for a few days or weeks if your
life’s demands—physical, mental, or emotional—are unusually high. A deload is also in order if you
have been forced to take time off from your kettlebell training.
Since you are now pursuing the timed S&S goals, there will be occasions to forgo the trusted talk
test and to race the clock. That is what Fridays are for. Stand by for the specifics in the Die but Do
chapter.
Brian “Sinister” Myers, SFG Team Leader
But before you take on the timed challenges, you need to deepen your skills of strength, power, and
energy management. In the next pages, you will learn about some of the principles underlying
StrongFirst kettlebell techniques and their applications. These subtle concepts demand rereading and
practice, practice, and practice. The rewards of this brain strain will be great: much higher levels of
performance in many physical endeavors—with less effort and more joy.
Once You Have Achieved Timeless Simple, the Program Changes
Unless specified otherwise, all the earlier instructions still apply.
Cut the training frequency to three to four times a week.
You may eliminate haloes and hip bridges from your warm-up if you no longer need
them.
If you have achieved perfect joint mobility for the squat, pry only during your first set of
five reps. For the second and third sets, go heavier—ideally in line with your one-arm swing
weight. Pause briefly on the bottom, but do not pry.
If your progress has stalled, drop down a bell size or two for a few weeks, then build up
again.
Introduce training for timed tests on Fridays.
Before you take on the timed tests, spend several months practicing the lessons from the
following chapters:
Hard Style
Speed Endurance is the Answer
The Secret of Hard Style Laziness
Secrets of Breath Mastery
Feel free to learn these lessons long before you have reached Timeless Simple.
HARD STYLE
When you train, you should train as if on the battlefield. Make your eyes glare, lower your
shoulders, and harden your body. If you train with the same intensity and spirit as though you are
striking and blocking against an actual opponent, you will naturally develop the same attitude as
on a battlefield.
— Anko Itosu, Okinawan karate master
At StrongFirst, we teach the “hard style” of kettlebell training born in the spec ops of the Soviet
Union. In the 1970s, select units adopted a karate-based style of hand-to-hand combat. The hard style of
kettlebell training evolved in the 1980s to support the hard style of fighting.
In the martial arts context, “hard style” refers to schools that meet force with force and greatly value
physical strength.
“The essence of karate techniques is kime,” explained karate great Masatoshi Nakayama. Kime is
usually translated as focus. “The meaning of kime is an explosive attack to the target using the
appropriate technique and maximum power in the shortest time possible.” The master reminds us of
karate’s “one strike, one kill” history to stress the importance of an all-out effort.
“A technique lacking kime can never be regarded as true karate, no matter how great the
resemblance to karate,” continued Nakayama. The karate master stresses that the same is true in noncontact sparring—one must use full force and focus.
StrongFirst has the same attitude. For us “hard style” is the “one strike, one kill” ancient karate
philosophy applied to strength training.
Do not hold back. This is hard style.
John “Roper” Saxon, Bruce Lee’s co-star in Enter the Dragon, told me Bruce Lee showed him the
kettlebell swing the day they met. Bruce would freeze the kettlebell for an instant at the top of each
swing to work on focusing the power of his punches. That is kime. This is exactly how we swing at
StrongFirst.
“Come up with tremendous power to lock out. Don’t play passive.” This is how powerlifting world
champion Donnie Thompson swings. This is kime. Thompson took his deadlift from 766 to 832 and
added 100 pounds to his bench press in nine months with hard style kettlebell training.
John “Roper” Saxon strictly military pressing a 32kg kettlebell on Muscle Beach in Santa Monica, California, at the age of 71
Strength training authority Dr. Fred Hatfield pointed out that at least 75% of a conventional weight
training set is wasted. Only certain parts of the lift are hard, and only the last reps. The rest is just semiwork and momentum. Hatfield instructed pushing as hard as possible against the weight every inch of
the way and on every rep.
F=ma: Force equals mass multiplied by acceleration. Within reason, you can make a given weight as
“heavy” as you want by accelerating it. “Now what took a lifter four workouts to accomplish in the
gym, takes a lifter using compensatory acceleration only one workout,” states Dr. Hatfield, who used
compensatory acceleration training (CAT) to achieve one of the first 1,000-pound squats. He trained
countless elite powerlifters, football and basketball players, and other athletes with great success.
Gary and Reneta Music: SFG Team Leaders, 8th and 5th degree black belts in Shurite Kempo, Grandmaster and Master
Instructor
Hatfield advocated exploding for improving cardiovascular efficiency as well. He specifically
recommended explosive rhythmical lifting with relaxed pauses between reps. “Each repetition should be
an all-out effort as well—maximum contracture against submaximal resistance, so multiple reps can be
performed.”
Sounds familiar?
Hard style training is also highly effective for fat loss. In a study that compared the energy
expenditures in the same exercise performed explosively and non-explosively, the former predictably
burned more calories. “The swing is inefficient, which is why it is a great fat burner,” explains Dan
John. “The bike is efficient—and fat people can ride it forever.”
Yes, you could burn the same calories by doing more reps with less power or less weight…but why?
Famous economist Milton Friedman was visiting a construction site in a country with Sovietinfluenced economic policies. It was in the 1960s and Friedman was shocked to see only shovels and no
mechanized equipment. He asked the government bureaucrat who was giving the tour about it.
The latter smugly replied, “You don’t understand. This is a jobs program.”
Prof. Friedman smiled, “Oh, I thought you were trying to build a canal. If it’s jobs you want, then
you should give these workers spoons, not shovels.”
HARDER IS BETTER
Everyone seeks to make progressive resistance training easier—whereas we seek ways to make
progressive resistance training harder.
—Marty Gallagher
Most trainees—kettlebell and other modalities—tend to settle into a speed most comfortable for the
given exercise, the pace at which the momentum makes the exercise the easiest. Thus, they do lazy
pendulum swings and rush through their get-ups. This is the opposite of what you want if you are
determined to get maximum results.
The sky is the limit when it comes to generating power with a moderate-size kettlebell. You do not
need more weight, reps, or fatigue to take your swings to the limit: Just add power.
Brandon Hetzler clocked our instructors swinging a paltry 24kg bell with almost 10G, making it
“weigh” over 500 pounds. So swing hard and do not worry about the numbers—unless these numbers
come from an accelerometer.
Small caliber, high velocity
To use martial arts analogies, the swing can be compared to tameshiwari, board and brick breaking,
and the get-up to kata, a series of choreographed movements.
The swing is a yang exercise; the get-up is a yin. It stands to reason the speed recommendation for
swings is reversed for get-ups—go slow.
Jon Engum, Master SFG and Taekwondo Grandmaster, demonstrates
martial parallels of the swing and the get-up.
Dr. Mark Cheng, Senior SFG, teaches get-ups at a “Tai Chi speed.” In Gray Cook’s words, if you
are unable to do a non-ballistic movement slowly, “you are hiding something.”
Ron Farrington, SFG Team Leader, SWAT operator and MMA fighter inserts pauses up to 10 seconds at each stage of the get-up.
Pay attention to the insights into kata practice the accomplished karateka Goran Powell learned from
his master and apply them to your get-up practice.
One evening [Shihan Chris Rowen] demonstrated a kata both soft and then hard-soft. During
the soft kata, he performed each move at a medium pace, with complete relaxation. As he rose onto
one leg and prepared to kick, I noticed a small, almost imperceptible wobble. He sunk his weight to
steady himself, and for a brief moment, he was completely still. Then he let fly with the kick and
continued.
When he performed the same kata in a hard-soft style, there was no sign of the wobble. I
realized why. By doing the kata slowly first, he was exposing his own slight imperfections in
balance and correcting them. His body was learning exactness and correctness. When he speeded
up, his balance had been recalibrated. It was perfect. It was awesome to watch.
If you always do katas hard and fast, you can hide imperfections with bluster and power. But
this is simply papering over the cracks. Doing a kata more slowly, without tension, allows you to
dwell on your weaknesses and correct them. Once you speed up again, your movements are much
more natural and effective.
THE SECRET OF HARD STYLE LAZINESS
Throwing a good punch works like firing a gun. Once the explosion has taken place in the
barrel, the bullet flies on its own accord. It accelerates naturally. It does not need to be pushed
along.
—Goran Powell, Waking Dragons
Harder is better—up to a point.
Ballistic events like swings and punches are funny: You will never be at your best when you are
trying your hardest.
Giving 100% tends to trigger excessive muscle tension that acts like a brake. This is why top
Russian specialists like Prof. Vladimir Volkov prescribe no more than a 95% effort when aiming to
express maximal power.
And sometimes even less. Prof. Nikolay Ozolin explained:
In perfecting the athlete’s ability to subjectively evaluate his actions in comparison with his
sensations during the performance of an exercise in two modes, maximal and near-maximal help
the athlete well. This creates a contrast in sensations and subjective evaluations.
For instance, a sprinter is instructed to run 30 meters loosely, without tension, but with an 8590% effort. He is not told his time. Then the task is repeated, this time with the instruction to run
all out, at maximal speed. Afterward, the athlete is told his results and, as a rule, the first number
is better.
Thus, use an approximately 90% effort to produce maximally explosive swings in your day-to-day
S&S training.
When undergoing the five-minute swing test or practicing for it, dial it down to about 80%. You will
trade a little power for a lot of endurance. Slightly easing up on the throttle makes the energy demands
drop exponentially, and the recovery times as well. For instance, a sprinter covering 100 meters at 95%
of max speed uses just 80% of the energy required to sprint the same distance at top speed. At 90%
speed, the energy cost sinks to 65%.
When I train tactical teams, I teach them the “percentage drill.” One operator holds a shield and the
other strikes—a punch, a kick, any technique he is skilled at. I tell him to hit as hard as possible several
times and instruct the training partner to note the power of each strike. That sets the baseline.
The author training Hungarian counter-terrorist operators
I show the striker a couple of Russian relaxation exercises that look like shaking water off his limbs.
Then I explain that I will be ordering him how much effort to put into each strike—50%, 80%, etc. I
specify the percentage refers to the effort—not to the speed or the follow-through. Hit as fast as always
and follow through the target rather than just tap it.
I take the operator through a dozen or so strikes, going up and down randomly: 50%! 80%! 90%!
50%! 70%! 80%... I remind him to loosen up between strikes. Then I ask the guy holding the shield
which strikes were the most powerful. Almost universally, experienced fighters hit their hardest
between 80% and 90%—and hard enough to do serious damage at 50%.
Brett Jones explains how to apply this martial skill to the kettlebell swing, using the imagery of a
volume knob with settings of one through 10.
We need to experiment with dialing the volume knob in on the desired settings to find our
personal optimal settings. How are we going to do that? During a set of two-armed swings, after a
couple of reps, begin to think of a volume or effort setting. Call out in your mind “Number two,”
and try to hit an effort or volume level of two during that swing.
Next rep, call out number nine and try to hit that effort or volume level. Next rep, hit a four, and
then an eight, and then back to a three. Hit all the settings on the volume knob and pay attention to
what setting provided the optimal result. Here optimal is defined as a “perfect” swing—crisp and
powerful, yet efficient.
You can also vary the “volume” setting from set to set, such as 32kg x 10 @ 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%,
90%, 80%, 50%, 70%, 80%.
Brett continues:
Efficiency is an athletic skill. But efficiency is not soft, or it doesn’t have to be. A boxer who
throws punches at the optimal level will deliver all the force needed, and be able to go the distance
because he can regulate his effort and not wear out by throwing max effort after max effort.
Although the max effort is available, it is held in its proper place to be used when needed. Swings
are no different. I can dial up a 10 or a two, but I still sniff in and brace at the bottom of the swing as I
load my hips, and I am still rooting and projecting energy up to a crisp hip finish. This is the essence of
balancing tension and relaxation in an athletic sense.
In summary, when practicing for the five-minute swing test or some other feat of repeated high
power, ease up on the throttle to approximately 80%. The power will drop a hair—noticeable mostly to
you and hardly to others. If you ever get into nonstop swing death marches with a lighter-size kettlebell
à la Brandon Hetzler, the effort is around 50%.
Never sandbag on your standard S&S training days with the talk test: Give no less than 90%. Easing
up even slightly significantly reduces the intensity of the metabolic processes and the resulting
adaptations.
I repeat: Holding back on your swing power will produce substantially inferior results. With 10 reps
per set, only 10 sets total, and talk test generous rests, you have no excuse for taking it easy.
Another aspect of going the distance with ballistic lifts is applying force as quickly as possible and
then relaxing. The following passage from the “Karate Way” column in Black Belt by Dave Lowry will
set you a distant goal to shoot for in your kettlebell swings.
Imagine a video of your reverse punch that’s broken down into 10 frames. At what point do you
begin to tighten the muscles you want to be firm so you make good, solid contact? A new student
starts tightening as soon as the movement begins. He is self-conscious about the motion. He is
trying to remember technical details. He is using all sorts of energy by squeezing his muscles long
before his fist reaches the target. A more advanced practitioner, in contrast, stays loose and relaxed
until frame number seven or eight. At higher levels, the tensing takes place at frame number 10,
the last moment. From there, more mastery comes when you do not tense at the beginning of
number 10, but at the last part of it.
The karateka calls this ability “turning laziness into technical mastery.” Note that this kind of
“laziness” does not refer to slowing down or weakening the contraction, but to limiting its duration, a
very important hard style distinction.
Hard style laziness works well only for the strong. Research shows that the stronger the muscle, the
less it has to contract to produce a given amount of force. This may sound obvious, but it is profound.
Fifty percent of very strong is strong. Fifty percent of weak is irrelevant.
SPEED ENDURANCE IS THE ANSWER
When your speed of movement drops—when it is no longer consistent from rep-to-rep within a
set—you are done.
—Geoff Neupert
Never allow the kettlebell to slow down during swings—even if the goal is conditioning and even
during a trial by swings.
The least productive, most exhausting and injury-producing form of resistance training is a high-rep
semi-grind—think of the ugly last reps of a long set of pushups or bodyweight squats.
Cuban coach Alfonso Duran used to tell young weightlifter Geoff Neupert to stop his sets before his
reps slowed down. Later, the athlete realized the times he had gotten hurt or overtrained were from not
listening to this advice. During his years as a Master SFG instructor at our school of strength, Geoff
kept driving home the message of never letting the speed drop. Ever.
Hyun “Sinister” Jin, SFG II/SFL
To understand why, you need to know a few facts about your muscle fibers.
There are three main muscle fiber types: I, IIA, and IIX.
Type I fibers are slow twitch—small, slow, and weak. They can go on forever, though. It is the
marathoner’s fiber.
Type IIX are huge and powerful—but they get worn out after a couple of reps. It is the weightlifter’s
fiber.
The intermediate type IIA is where the money is when you have to produce high forces and maintain
them for some time. It is the fighter’s fiber.
The S&S swing protocol focuses on the fighter’s fiber.
When your reps slow down, it is the best indicator your IIA fast fibers have had it, and slow type I
fibers are doing most of the work. This is bad news for several reasons.
First, you are no longer training your power.
Second, you are not improving your power endurance either. Prof. Nikolay Ozolin defined
endurance as “the ability to perform work at the desired intensity level for an extended period of time,
the ability to fight fatigue and to effectively recover during and after work.”
I shall underline the part so frequently missed: at the desired intensity level. It does not matter if you
can do 1,000 punches if none of them can knock out your little sister.
Incidentally, this is one of the reasons S&S does not prescribe training for timed tests until you have
reached the Timeless Simple strength level. As bluntly put by Steve Baccari, “Don’t worry about
strength endurance. You have no strength to endure.”
Third, you are more exposed to injury. Dr. Chad Waterbury, who has been on the cutting edge of
ballistic conditioning for years, offers a great analogy:
Imagine your truck is stuck in the ditch and you have 10 guys at your disposal who can pull it
out. If you let just three guys pull, it is more likely one of them will get injured because they have to
work considerably harder than if all 10 guys were pulling on the rope.
This is how you should think of motor unit recruitment. There is no reason to do slow-grind
reps that overload fewer motor units when you could recruit all the motor units and minimize
muscle strain.
Fourth, once your slow fibers have been pounded, they easily go into spasm, exposing you to injury,
compromising your training and the quality of your life. Interestingly, muscles with a high ratio of slow
fibers tend to congregate deeper, next to the bones. And slower fibers within any muscle tend to be
deeper in the muscle. These two pieces of trivia should give you a hint as to why it is so hard to relieve
some knots with massage and foam rollers—they are hard to reach. Do not create the problem in the
first place.
Fifth, explains Geoff Neupert, slogging and straining through your reps at a reduced speed will
overtax your entire system—slowing down your recovery and your progress.
These five reasons should be enough to convince you to exercise discipline and stop when your
swings are about to slow down—not when something gives out. It may feel like quitting, but it is not.
By the way, you may use your will power to maintain a high power output rather than to just keep
going.
It is equally important that you not only maintain high speed, but finish each rep with a powerful
glute cramp and abdominal brace. In addition to building power for knockout strikes and winning
deadlifts, this exaggerated glute contraction protects the hip joints and spine. If you can no longer pinch
your cheeks, the gig is up. Ditto for your abbies: Failing to tense them at the top of the swing not only
robs your power, but also endangers your spine.
Watch your breathing too. If you are no longer able to maintain the hard style breathing rhythm—in
on the way down, out on the way up—or if your breathing becomes irregular, the set is over.
Remember this when you swing against the clock, doing the five-minute test, or peaking for it. The
key to safely getting the most out of your trial by swings is treating the sets as speed endurance
exercise. Set the goal of maintaining a high speed for as long as possible, as opposed to swinging at any
cost.
SECRETS OF BREATH MASTERY
When you own your breath, nobody can steal your peace.
—Anonymous
Breathing has the most profound implications on your performance and well-being—far greater than
even most professional coaches realize. And getting oxygen to your cells is only a small part of it.
Remarkably, martial artists developed state-of-the-art breathing techniques centuries before scientists
were able to understand and validate them.
Andrey Kochergin, a Russian Special Forces vet and full contact karate master, likes to use Asian
terminology to classify different types of breathing and muscular contractions. He explains that yin
breathing is used during wrestling, grappling, footwork, and some blocks. It is a steady, even breathing,
punctuated by forced diaphragmatic exhalations during exertions. This describes the kettlebell get-up to
a “T.”
Yang breathing is breathing during a strike or some other explosive action. “A sharp exhalation is
performed with maximal tension and ideally, for greater concentration, with a scream,” comments
Kochergin. “In the end of a yang exhalation, there is a breath hold, essential for instant concentration of
a strike, but counterproductive in long strength efforts of wrestling.” This is the hard style kettlebell
swing.
But this “power breathing” is not just about the fighting spirit. You are not going to frighten the
kettlebell. Over half a century ago, Soviet scientists discovered that cranking up the pressure inside the
abdomen automatically—and dramatically—amplifies any muscular exertion. As a bonus, you get a
great ab workout. There are many athletes at StrongFirst who have not done anything that looks like ab
exercise for years, yet sport bulletproof six-packs.
At StrongFirst, we refer to yin and yang breathing, respectively, as breathing behind the shield and
power breathing.
In swings, power breathing is combined with a special Russian inhalation technique: fractional
breathing. Take two powerful nasal abdominal inhalations as the bell starts descending after a powerful
swing finish. Fractional breathing was developed to get more oxygen into the lungs and to give them
more time to absorb it.
The inhales must be so sharp that your nostrils stick together, like you had a nose job.
Knowing how to breathe when recovering is no less vital than the skill to breathe during exertion.
Between bouts of heavy exertion, karate practitioners stand around with deadpan faces and perform
shinkokyuu—deep abdominal breathing. Rob Lawrence, a senior instructor at my kettlebell school, took
this ancient practice a step further. He explains:
In karate, they often told us to breathe calmly, but they did not show us any way of cultivating
the skill. The breath-timing technique is designed to do exactly that—teach controlled breathing as
a skill.
The idea is to do a set, take a number of breaths based on some ratio to the number reps you
just did, then do the next set. As you will rapidly discover, the way to survive is to slow your breath
down as much as possible, to get maximum air, and to increase your rest period between each set.
If you panic and breathe quickly, your rest period is decreased and you are soon dispatched to the
dustbin of history. On the other hand, the only timing involved is your breath—and the idea is to
“cheat” as much as possible by drawing out the breaths and increasing the rest periods.
Not only does such breathing allow you recover physiologically, it also reduces your stress levels.
When we teach our kettlebell instructor courses to special operations teams, on the last day of the
course the students are required to put another operator, inexperienced in kettlebells, through a practice
and then a workout. We never specify what kind of a workout. Yet almost universally, Lawrence’s
breath timing is prescribed. Professional warriors know the importance of controlling stress in combat
and immediately recognize the value of the technique.
Literal breath counting is not a part of the standard S&S regimen, but its mindset is: Slow down
your recovery breaths as much as possible when doing your basic talk test training.
It is important that you empty your lungs completely—exaggerate. This habit will come in handy
when you train or test against the clock.
Inhale through your nose, always with the talk test, and if possible, when timed. Although slow
breathing will be a luxury you can no longer afford, keeping it deep remains not negotiable no matter
how hard you push.
Ronen Katz, Senior SFG and 6th degree black belt in Kyokushin karate, studied under Sosai Mas Oyama. Ronen has also been
travelling to India for 20 years to “to learn the ancient [yoga] techniques to better breathing, concentration, relaxation and mental
stability...”
DIE BUT DO
Kettlebell high-rep ballistics are the closest
you can get to fighting without throwing a punch.
—A federal counterterrorist operator
Russians have an expression, “Die but do.” They amuse themselves comparing it with the American
“Do or die.” Where a Yankee gets off the hook from fulfilling his orders if he croaks, a Russkie may not
use death as an excuse.
Joking aside, there comes a time when you take a step away from your “punch the clock” training
and push the pedal to the metal.
Up until now, your choices for testing your mettle and netting some cool adaptations were kettlebellfree—running up a mountain with a heavy pack and such. Now that you are strongly and competently
one-arm swinging 24kg if you are a lady and 32kg if you are a gent, you should be skilled enough to go
to the limit in the kettlebell swing with the five-minute test.
Racing the clock heavily involves glycolysis, with all its baggage. But taken in small doses, this
acidic poison becomes a strong medicine. It accelerates the gains made with the foundational talk-test
driven training.
It is vital that you do not fall for the “high intensity interval training” propaganda and do not start
treating these smokers as the main event rather than the occasional side dish they are intended to be.
“In view of the recent hype and the explosion in the number of studies investigating interval training
in various health, rehabilitation, and performance settings, one could be forgiven for assuming that this
training form was some magic training pill scientists had devised comparatively recently. The reality is
that athletes have been using interval training for at least 60 years,” write Drs. Stephen Seiler and Espen
Tønnessen, who have thoroughly researched the training loads of top athletes in a variety of endurance
sports from cross-country skiing to rowing. “Elite endurance athletes perform 80% or more of their
training at intensities clearly below their lactate threshold and use high-intensity training surprisingly
sparingly.”
Hence you will go above the threshold—failing the talk test—only once a week. This represents 25–
33% of all your work—more than the elites’ 20%, but a fraction of the pop fitness gurus’ 100%.
Skip the “die but do” training on weeks when you are deloading or you simply had a hard week; do
a standard talk-regulated session with heavier bells.
A key detail: Go against the clock with lighter weights, “S-” and “G-.”
Many roads lead to 10x10 swings in five minutes with a given weight.
The beaten path is to develop lactic acid tolerance by forcefully compressing the rest periods while
swinging the bell one aims to conquer in five minutes.
The high road goes through building a strength reserve. Strength makes everything easier and you
can make the five-minute goal weight feel light. Pavel Macek recalls, “32 felt like 24 when my main
training weight was 40—I could do the [five-minute Simple] test any time with 32.”
An additional benefit of this tactic is to prevent yourself from subconsciously learning to power
down and pace yourself with your heavier weights on max-power/talk-test days. Racing the clock with a
lighter weight will help you to disassociate the two.
So on Fridays, lift weights one step below the ones you own in the talk test driven practice. In other
words, ladies go 4kg lighter and gentlemen 8kg lighter.
To be clear, you will be using only one kettlebell per lift on smoking Fridays, not a mix of weights
as in talk test regulated heavier practice.
For example, in her talk test training, a girevichka has been doing swings with a mix of 24kg
(“S”) and 28kg (“S+”) weights. On Fridays, she will swing 20kg (“S-”). Only when she has
replaced 24kg with 28kg in all ten sets will she bump up her Friday weight to 24kg.
In another example, in his talk test training, a girevik has been doing get-ups with a mix of
32kg (“G”) and 40kg (“G+”). On Fridays, he will get up with 24kg (“G-”). Only when he has
replaced 32kg with 40kg in all sets will he bump up his Friday weight to 32kg.
What if you conquer 100 swings in five minutes, a minute of rest, and five get-ups per arm in 10
minutes long before you have upgraded the weights in all the sets in talk test training?
Still follow the above instructions and do not advance in weight on Fridays. Have patience and work
on owning the milestone you have reached.
On the other hand, what if you do not meet the timed standards by the time you have upgraded the
weights in all the sets in talk-test regulated practice?
This is extremely unlikely. Even if it does happen, still follow the instructions and up the weights.
Eventually you will catch up.
It must be stressed that even though you are breaching the lactic threshold and sucking wind on
Fridays, far from every week is “die but do.” Alternate weeks of moderate and hard efforts using more
or less rest between sets. And even a “hard” effort rarely needs to be all out.
Even on the days when you hold nothing back, never compromise quality to beat the clock. You
may not, under any circumstances:
✓
lose speed or power in the swing;
✓
compromise technique;
✓
gasp for air during work or rest;
✓
change the breathing pattern during a set.
Adjust your rest periods accordingly.
Make sure every rep is in total compliance with the technique standards; review them thoroughly.
The most common mistake made by Simple or Sinister aspirants is not swinging the bell up to the chest
level.
Being too cheap with power and forgetting to go hard style is another. Remember the lessons of hard
style laziness and set your “volume knob” to 80%. No less.
When you have parked the bell, suppress the urge to pant. Breathe deep, purging the air from the
bottom of your lungs and then filling them fully, from bottom to top. Do yourself a favor and start
breathing in this manner after the first set, when you do not yet feel the need for it.
Pavel, I’ve had the opportunity to test your programs in some epic places, from the battlefield to the ski slopes, from high-
mountain mountaineering to high-altitude backcountry hunts.
In 2005, I followed your “grinds and ballistics” program from The Russian Kettlebell Challenge before a deployment—what an
eye-opener. Never have I moved so well while under load (body armor). Then, in 2006, I followed the Rite of Passage from Enter the
Kettlebell!. I liked this program even better because it was just two lifts. I had my doubts; I should have known better.
From 2007–2009, in addition to multiple deployments, I climbed El Capitan, Denali, and Aconcagua. I wanted to build or
maintain my strength without gaining muscle. I made some minor modifications to the Rite of Passage (heavier presses with a lower
volume and heavier swings for lower reps). My power-to-weight ratio skyrocketed.
After that, and most recently (post medical retirement), I followed Simple & Sinister. I haven’t gotten to Sinister, but I really
enjoyed it. Like all of your programs: Simple…not easy. Effective…not overwhelming. Up to this point, my high-mileage body could
not handle multiple ski days. After achieving Simple, I can do two or three days in a row without any pain. Once again, mountain
ready!
—Eric Frohardt, SFG, veteran US Navy SEAL
SIMPLE & SINISTER SUMMARIZED
It could not get much worse, he decided, which showed how much he knew.
—Robert Sheckley, Options
Once you have achieved Timeless Simple, your training evolves. Unless specified otherwise, the
earlier instructions still apply.
1.​Deeper practice
Read and reread the entire book. Keep discovering new subtleties and refining your skill set.
“…learning is rooted in repetition,” stresses Nassim Nicholas Taleb in Skin in the Game, “…
meaning that the reading of a single text twice is more profitable than reading two different things
once…”
2.​Schedule
Cut the training frequency to three or four times a week. Your options:
Mon
X
X
Tue
X
Wed
X
Thur
X
Fri
X
X
Sat
Sun
You may eliminate haloes and hip bridges if you no longer need them. If your hips are moving
freely, reduce the number of prying goblet squat sets to one and do the remaining two sets with a
heavier kettlebell or two with a brief pause on the bottom but no prying. Aim to bring your nonprying goblet squat weight in line with your one-arm swing weight.
3.​Train for the timed test
On Fridays, train with lighter kettlebells: “S-” (one-arm swings) and “G-.” Swing with an
approximately 80% effort. Rest less than determined by the talk test. Use a timer at least some of
the time.
You may not, under any circumstances:
✓
lose speed or power in the swing;
✓
compromise technique;
✓
gasp for air during work or rest;
✓
change the breathing pattern during a set.
Adjust your rest periods accordingly.
Alternate weeks of moderate and hard efforts: more or less rest between sets. Skip this type of
training on weeks when you are deloading or you simply had a hard week.
This type of training replaces the non-specific “jolt” you had been practicing until you reached
Timeless Simple.
4.​Deload
Deload—drop down a bell size or two for up to several weeks, then build up again after any of
the following:
Your progress has stalled;
You have taken time off S&S;
You have been under stress—physical, mental, or emotional.
5.​Repeat until strong.
Simple Goals
100 one-arm swings (sum of arms) in sets of 10 in five minutes
Five get-ups per arm (in sets of one) in 10 minutes, after the swings and one
minute of rest
Women
24kg
Men
32kg
16kg
32kg
Sinister Challenge
100 one-arm swings (sum of arms) in sets of 10 in five minutes
Five get-ups per arm (in sets of one) in 10 minutes, after the swings and one
minute of rest
Women
32kg
Men
48kg
24kg
48kg
TO SINISTER AND BEYOND
The discovery of iron brought grief to men.
—Herodotus
With the Timeless Simple base you have patiently built, you will quickly reach the Simple timed
goal abiding by the instructions on the previous pages.
As for Sinister…where Simple is a worthy yet realistic accomplishment for many ladies and gents
with grit and patience, Sinister is rare air. Far from everyone will be able to exercise bragging rights to
it. Fortunately, the lives of most people do not demand Sinister-level strength and conditioning.
On her way from Simple to Sinister, Lacie Brandts, StrongFirst Elite experienced a few unexpected results:
My deadlift personal record increased from 275 to 300 pounds.
My [one-arm] military press went from 20 to 24kg on both arms.
My max bodyweight pull-ups went from 6 to 10.
My weighted pull-up went from 8 to 14kg.
Sinister is not the goal of this book—it is a challenge for a select few readers. If you choose to climb
this steep mountain, there are three main roads to the top.
One: Keep following the instructions for reaching Simple.
Two: Take time to deepen and expand your kettlebell skills. The best way is to train for the highly
mentally and physically demanding SFG kettlebell instructor certification.
Master the snatch, the military press, and the double-kettlebell clean and front squat. Then get
strong in these movements. Finally, return to your Sinister quest.
You will discover that once you refocus on the swing and the get-up, your new skills and strength
will enable you to take a quantum leap in performance.
Three: Take a detour into barbell strength. Build a respectable deadlift, military press, and squat—
Zercher or front. Once you can deadlift 500 pounds, you will toy with the 106-pound Beast.
Having dedicated a year or two to the second or the third option, return to swings and get-ups with a
vengeance and more sophisticated programming such as Strong Endurance™ and Plan Strong.™ Less
simple, more sinister.
What if you decide to stop at Simple and not pursue Sinister?
Once you own Simple, it will be easy to maintain what you have worked hard and long to reach
with two talk-test regulated S&S sessions a week, plus an occasional three-week peak. Be content
maintaining a level of all-around fitness most people will never approach—and do it with a minimal
time investment.
Better yet, keep what you have achieved in the above manner—and start exploring other venues of
strength. StrongFirst offers three tracks to strength and excellence: kettlebell, barbell, and bodyweight.
Search our site and you will find many challenging and rewarding paths in any one of them or a
combination.
Power to you!
Eugene Kvarteng celebrates earning his SFG instructor diploma.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author would like to thank the following ladies and gentlemen for their valuable feedback and
suggestions for the revised edition:
Anna Cannington, Al Ciampa, Jon Engum, Brett Jones, Ronen Katz, Craig Marker, Alexey Senart,
Fabio Zonin.
A special thanks to Pavel Macek.
And for the first edition:
Michael Castrogiovanni, Andrea Chang, Ron Farrington, Steve Freides, Eric Frohardt, Dr. Kristann
Heinz, Dan John, Rob Lawrence, Jeremy Layport, Geoff Neupert, Mark Reifkind, Alexey Senart, Nikki
Shlosser, Mark Toomey, Chad Waterbury, David Whitley, Fabio Zonin, as well as a dozen gentlemen
who chose to remain anonymous.
A special thanks to Brandon Hetzler.
Additional photo credits:
A kettlebell at a military base: Courtesy of Lt. Col. Minter B. Ralston IV, USMC
Carl Agnelli: Courtesy of Carl Agnelli
Kettlebells down range: Courtesy of U.S. military operator, name withheld
Tommy Blom: Courtesy of Tommy Blom
Asha Wagner: Courtesy of Asha Wagner
Mira Kwon Gracia: Courtesy of Mira Kwon Gracia
Noah Maxwell: Courtesy of Noah Maxwell
Anna Cannington: Courtesy of Anna Cannington
Cornell Ward and Gaius Ebratt: Courtesy of Steve Milles, Five Points Academy, NYC
Prof. Stuart McGill with the author: Courtesy of Stuart McGill
Cornell Ward: Courtesy of Steve Milles, Five Points Academy, NYC
Collecting swing data: Courtesy of Prof. Stuart McGill’s Spine Biomechanics Lab, University
of Waterloo, Canada
Gray Cook: Courtesy of Gray Cook
Pavel Macek: Justyna Macková
Mark Toomey: Courtesy of Mark Toomey
Pavel Macek driving home “breathing behind the shield”: Alžběta Tušková
Steve Baccari and his notes: Courtesy of Steve Baccari
F-16: Tom Buysse/Shutterstock.com
Justyna Macková: Iva Krochotová
Roxanne Myers: Courtesy of Roxanne Myers
Raye Johnston: Courtesy of Raye Johnston
John Faas: Courtesy of the Faas family
Tracy Reifkind: Courtesy of Tracy Reifkind
Bud Jeffries: Courtesy of Bud Jeffries
After 2,001 swings: Courtesy of Brandon Hetzler
Nicole Davis: Courtesy of Nicole Davis
Michael Castrogiovanni: Courtesy of Michael Castrogiovanni
Rachel Darvas with wolves: Courtesy of Veresegyház Bear and Wolf Sanctuary/Pitshop Photo
Rachel Darvas: Courtesy of Peter Lakatos
Mark Reifkind: Courtesy of Mark Reifkind
Michael Yilek: Courtesy of Michael Yilek
Brian Myers: Courtesy of Brian Myers
John Saxon: Pavel Tsatsouline
Gary and Reneta Music: Courtesy of Gary and Reneta Music
The author doing swings on a force plate: Courtesy of Brandon Hetzler
Jon Engum: Courtesy of Jon Engum
Ron Farrington: Courtesy of Ron Farrington
The author training Hungarian counter-terrorist operators: Courtesy of TEK and Peter Lakatos
Hyun Jin: Courtesy of Hyun Jin
Ronen Katz: Courtesy of Ronen Katz
Eric Frohardt: Courtesy of Eric Frohardt
Lacie Brandts: Courtesy of Lacie Brandts
Eugene Kwarteng: Andrea Chang
Other credits:
“The swing—a fat-burning athlete-builder”: Quote by Dan John
“Flip the crazy switch”: Quote by David Whitley
Get the most out of your extreme handheld gym.
Like martial arts or yoga skills, kettlebell skills run deep.
The difference in impact between a beginner’s straight punch and a pro’s is staggering. Ditto for the
health benefits of a most basic asana performed by a newbie and a yoga master. And the power,
conditioning, and body transformation effects of the Russian kettlebell.
Get the most out of Kettlebell Simple & Sinister by learning your kettlebell skills from an expert.
Whether you prefer to practice alone at home, in a one-on-one lesson, or in a group class, we have
got you covered. Take your pick:
Video
strongfirst.com/kettlebell-onlinecourse/
One-day
live workshop
in your area
Private
lessons
or group
classes
Power to you!
strongfirst.com/courses/kettlebellcourse/
strongfirst.com/gyms/ or
strongfirst.com/instructors/
Join StrongFirst’s
Online Community
—a classy joint where we help
each other get stronger
[1] SFG is the kettlebell education arm of my company StrongFirst. “G” stands for “girya.”
[2] You will find our international certified instructor directory at strongfirst.com/instructors/search/.
[3]At least with light weights. The kettlebell has an offset center of mass, which means that the heavier and larger in diameter the bell
gets, the farther from the fist the center of mass moves. As a result, with a bigger bell, a perfectly stacked arm will no longer be vertical.
You will discover this on your own as you approach the Simple-size kettlebell.
[4] The first number after the weight refers to the reps and the second to the sets.
Thus, 16kg x 10/8 means 8 sets of 10 reps with 16kg.
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